I am surprised that species thought to be extinct are still being 'rediscovered',
like this one, the only
specimen of Chelonoidis phantasticus that we know of, (Photo Credit: Rodrigo
Buenida/AFP via Getty Images), tests
carried out in May 2021 have confirmed that the tortoise is part of the species
Chelonoidis phantasticus, which was thought to be extinct, the last
time a confirmed sighting of the species was registered was in 1906, the group that made the discovery consisted of Washington Tapia and a
team of four rangers from the Galápagos National Park—Jeffreys Malaga, Eduardo
Vilema, Roberto Ballesteros, and Simon Villamar—plus Forrest Galante, a host and biologist with Animal Planet, The
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) had flagged the
Fernandina giant tortoise on its Red List as possibly extinct until
2017, two years after Malaga came across the reptile's feces in the park and
three years after the inauguration of the GTRI. Its designation was then
changed to critically endangered,
so when Washington Tapia found a Fernandina giant tortoise on its namesake
island in the Galápagos, it was like winning an Academy Award, "For me it
was the most important achievement of my life because I have been working on
tortoise conservation for 30 years," says the director of the nonprofit
Galápagos Conservancy's Giant
Tortoise Restoration Initiative (GTRI) and leader of the expedition.
"This was basically my Oscar." for myself it still amazing that the group of islands that has been so well studied and documented still has its secrets!
No comments:
Post a Comment