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The St Lucia whiptail lizard Cnemidophorus vanzoi: a conservation dilemma?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 September 2006

Richard P. Young
Affiliation:
Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, Les Augres Manor, Trinity, Jersey, JE3 5BP, UK Channel Islands
Julia E. Fa
Affiliation:
Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, Les Augres Manor, Trinity, Jersey, JE3 5BP, UK Channel Islands
Agnieszka Ogrodowczyk
Affiliation:
Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, Les Augres Manor, Trinity, Jersey, JE3 5BP, UK Channel Islands
Matthew Morton
Affiliation:
Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, Les Augres Manor, Trinity, Jersey, JE3 5BP, UK Channel Islands
Stephen Lesmond
Affiliation:
Department of Forestry, Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Castries, St Lucia
Stephan M. Funk
Affiliation:
Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, Les Augres Manor, Trinity, Jersey, JE3 5BP, UK Channel Islands
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Abstract

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Uncertainties in species definitions can have important consequences for biodiversity conservation because taxonomic rank is used as a criterion to assess the conservation priorities of threatened organisms. The Vulnerable St Lucia whiptail lizard Cnemidophorus vanzoi, considered a single species, is the sole representative of its genus in the Caribbean region, found on Maria Major and Maria Minor islands off the coast of St Lucia. However, a recent study revealed significant morphological and phylogenetic differences between the two populations and recommended they should be managed as two separate entities. We surveyed the two populations and estimated them to comprise 1,985 and 29 individuals on Maria Major and Minor, respectively. The Maria Minor population is currently at a critically low level and consequently highly susceptible to demographic and genetic stochasticity and catastrophic events, in particular the colonization of invasive mammalian predators. If our goal is to conserve biodiversity and evolutionary potential we face a dilemma in formulating the optimum strategy for the management of these two threatened populations on the species boundary. We discuss some potential management options but also raise this issue for discussion in the conservation biology community.

Type
Short Communication
Copyright
© 2006 Fauna & Flora International