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Descendants of extinct tortoise species found in Galapagos

The Canary by The Canary
2 February 2020
in Environment, Global, News, Other News & Features, Science
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Conservationists working around the largest volcano on the Galapagos Islands say they have found 30 giant tortoises partially descended from two extinct species, including that of the famed Lonesome George.

The Galapagos National Park and Galapagos Conservancy said that a young female has a direct line of descent from the Chelonoidis abingdonii species of Pinta Island.

The last of those tortoises was Lonesome George, who died in June 2012 and was believed to be more than 100 years old.

Another 11 males and 18 females were from the Chelonoidis niger line of Floreana Island.

The 45-member expedition was working around the Wolf Volcano on Isabela island.

It said pirates and whalers had taken tortoises from other islands in the archipelago and left them near the volcano.

BREAKING NEWS: A team from the Giant #Tortoise Restoration Initiative, led by @wacho_tapia in #Galapagos, has located a young tortoise with Pinta Island tortoise ancestry — Lonesome George’s species, the species considered to be extinct!! Read more: https://t.co/x962sMhcwd https://t.co/HqUuZRvMV8

— GalapagosConservancy (@SaveGalapagos) February 1, 2020

Those found during the new expedition were hybrids descended from both the extinct and other species.

The Galapagos, whose variety of endemic species helped inspire Charles Darwin, held 15 closely related species of tortoise, according to the Conservancy, which estimates that 20,000–25,000 wild tortoises live on the islands today.

At least four of the species are now considered extinct.

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