Abstract

BackgroundThe giant lizard of La Gomera (Gallotia bravoana), is an endemic lacertid of this Canary Island that lives confined to a very restricted area of occupancy in a steep cliff, and is catalogued as Critically Endangered by IUCN. We present the first population genetic analysis of the wild population as well as of captive-born individuals (for which paternity data are available) from a recovery center. Current genetic variability, and inferred past demographic changes were determined in order to discern the relative contribution of natural versus human-mediated effects on the observed decline in population size.ResultsGenetic analyses indicate that the only known natural population of the species shows low genetic diversity and acts as a single evolutionary unit. Demographic analyses inferred a prolonged decline of the species for at least 230 generations. Depending on the assumed generation time, the onset of the decline was dated between 1200–13000 years ago. Pedigree analyses of captive individuals suggest that reproductive behavior of the giant lizard of La Gomera may include polyandry, multiple paternity and female long-term sperm retention.ConclusionsThe current low genetic diversity of G. bravoana is the result of a long-term gradual decline. Because generation time is unknown in this lizard and estimates had large credibility intervals, it is not possible to determine the relative contribution of humans in the collapse of the population. Shorter generation times would favor a stronger influence of human pressure whereas longer generation times would favor a climate-induced origin of the decline. In any case, our analyses show that the wild population has survived for a long period of time with low levels of genetic diversity and a small effective population size. Reproductive behavior may have acted as an important inbreeding avoidance mechanism allowing the species to elude extinction. Overall, our results suggest that the species retains its adaptive potential and could restore its ancient genetic diversity under favorable conditions. Therefore, management of the giant lizard of La Gomera should concentrate efforts on enhancing population growth rates through captive breeding of the species as well as on restoring the carrying capacity of its natural habitat.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12863-014-0121-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The giant lizard of La Gomera (Gallotia bravoana), is an endemic lacertid of this Canary Island that lives confined to a very restricted area of occupancy in a steep cliff, and is catalogued as Critically Endangered by IUCN

  • Microsatellite variation Eight (GBR9, 11, 16, 20, 24, 26, 29 and 30) out of the eleven loci developed in this study were polymorphic in G. bravoana (Table 1A), and seven of these were polymorphic in related species (Additional file 1: Table S1)

  • The demographic history analyses performed in this study indicate that the original G. bravoana population was made up of thousands of individuals that suffered a long-term gradual demographic decline that was estimated to have started between 1,200–13,000 years ago

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Summary

Introduction

The giant lizard of La Gomera (Gallotia bravoana), is an endemic lacertid of this Canary Island that lives confined to a very restricted area of occupancy in a steep cliff, and is catalogued as Critically Endangered by IUCN. Several studies [8,9,10,11,12] have shown that, after severe bottlenecks, some species have been able to persist for long periods of time with depleted heterozygosity levels Ecological factors, such as the quality of the habitat, environmental stability, the purging effect of selection, and specific life history traits (e.g., mating systems and generation lengths) could counteract the impact of declines on population genetic variation [12,13]. Determining the long-term survival of an island endemic species requires disentangling the relative effects of genetic and ecological (natural or human-mediated) drivers of extinction, and their relative contribution at different temporal and spatial scales, as well as characterizing potential intrinsic species traits that could enhance or slow down extinction processes [6,8,9,14,15]

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