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Ch. 14: Zoos and Gardens Ex Situ Conservation • Ex situ: outside of a species’ habitat • Historically, zoos and gardens were an entertaining diversion for the wealthy • Now goals include • educating general public • gaining support for biodiversity conservation • scientific research The ark metaphor • 24 species of plant and 36 species of animal exist only in captivity • Captive populations may be an insurance program in case of extinction in the wild • Some species went extinct in captivity • and others may never be kept in captivity Studbooks and Pedigrees • Avoid artificial selection ~ don’t want to domesticate them, want to release them into the wild • or keep two breeding stocks, one for reintroduction, one for captivity • Want to avoid inbreeding, but record keeping when siblings are in different institutions is complicated. • use studbooks and pedigrees, usually one per species • Logistics of maintaining genetic diversity • • • • shipping breeders from one zoo to another transferring embryos using domestics as surrogates calculating mean kinship ~ identify individuals who are more different Storing Biodiversity • Some life-history stages are easier to keep ex situ than others • Microbes ~ freeze-dry samples • easier to store than culture • don’t have to worry about evolutionary changes in culture • Animals ~ cryopreservation of semen and embryos • common for domesticated species, beginning for wild ones • Plants ~ many seeds easily maintain viability • but viability decreases over time, so occasionally grow-out seeds to get new ones. • otherwise, retain pollen, plantlets, tissue samples • common for domestics, but wild species representation increasing • Genetic Material ~ tissue for DNA extraction, DNA Conservation of Domestics • Few species dominate our diet, but several different varieties • plants may be called cultivars • animals usually called breeds • Ideally crops are high yield, don’t require pesticides, herbicides, too much water, fertilizer or anything else • landraces: local varieties that do well in local conditions • but often not high yield • International repositories for different plant varieties • Maintenance of local breeds becoming a hobby of ranchers • but wild ancestors of domestic animals generally overlooked as source of diversity Ex Situ – In Situ Interface • Zoos and gardens are not a replacement for natural ecosystems • Reintroductions are often unsuccessful • to date, no self-sustaining populations • Not all captive animals were born in captivity • remove individuals for use in zoos and gardens • remove individuals because low chance of survival in wild • what about when this means removing breeding individuals from a threatened, but breeding population? • Shift from exhibiting the most species to exhibiting species who can best benefit from captive breeding programs • but resources often directed toward most popular exhibits Ex Situ Conservation is Controversial • Just let species go extinct with dignity? • Easier to augment with captive breeding than mitigate threat? • Spending time and money on husbandry and captivity rather than on the ground conservation and management? • But still does good things • Increasingly involved in advocating for conservation and funneling money to in situ conservation • If in situ conservation is successful, zoos and gardens stop being a Noah’s arc and focus on education and outreach But it has supporters • Increasingly involved in advocating for conservation and funneling money to in situ conservation