One of these wolves is not like the other: morphological effects and conservation implications of captivity in Mexican wolves

Maintaining animal populations in captivity can be a useful way to conserve species, especially those that are extinct in the wild or endangered in their native habitats. These animals could be reintroduced into the wild from captivity if conditions improve. However, captive populations of endangere...

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Veröffentlicht in:Animal conservation 2022-02, Vol.25 (1), p.77-90
Hauptverfasser: Siciliano‐Martina, L., Light, J. E., Riley, D. G., Lawing, A. M.
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container_issue 1
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creator Siciliano‐Martina, L.
Light, J. E.
Riley, D. G.
Lawing, A. M.
description Maintaining animal populations in captivity can be a useful way to conserve species, especially those that are extinct in the wild or endangered in their native habitats. These animals could be reintroduced into the wild from captivity if conditions improve. However, captive populations of endangered species are often established with few wild‐caught individuals and are maintained in novel habitats, conditions which may make these populations prone to morphological divergence. Changes in cranial morphology, in particular, may limit reintroduction success because these morphological changes may alter cranial functionality related to capturing and consuming prey. To assess whether unintentional morphological changes occur in captivity, we examined the crania and mandibles of 275 specimens of wild, captive and reintroduced Mexican wolves Canis lupus baileyi. We detected significant differences in skull size and shape among these populations. Captive specimens displayed the greatest overall shape variation and were significantly differentiated from the wild population in regions of the skull that are essential to cranial functionality. The reintroduced population displayed the narrowest trait distribution, with cranial morphology that grouped consistently with the captive morphotype. The small number of individuals of the founding population along with the increased variation in cranial morphology among captive Mexican wolves suggests that morphological changes in captivity may be related to genetic changes such as genetic drift or relaxed selection. This study helps to define the changes that may occur in captivity, the potential mechanisms behind these shifts, and the ways in which morphological variation in captive populations may impact conservation initiatives. Captive populations of endangered species are often established with few wild‐caught individuals and are maintained in novel habitats, conditions which may make these populations prone to morphological divergence, potentially altering cranial functionality. Using the crania and mandibles of wild, captive, and reintroduced Mexican wolves (Canis lupus baileyi), we detected significant differences in skull size and shape among these populations. This study helps to define the changes that may occur in captivity, the potential mechanisms behind these shifts, and the ways in which morphological variation in captive populations may impact conservation initiatives.
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subjects Animal population
Animal populations
Canis lupus baileyi
Captivity
Conservation
Divergence
Endangered & extinct species
Endangered populations
Endangered species
functional morphology
Genetic drift
geometric morphometrics
Habitats
Morphology
Populations
Prey
Rare species
Reintroduction
reintroductions
Shape
Skull
translocations
Wildlife conservation
wolf
Wolves
title One of these wolves is not like the other: morphological effects and conservation implications of captivity in Mexican wolves
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