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词条 Hybrid iguana
释义

  1. Anatomy and morphology

  2. References

  3. External links

{{Hybridbox/lua
| name = Hybrid iguana
| image =
| image_caption = Hybrid iguana climbing Opuntia cactus, South Plaza Island, Galápagos Islands
| status = Not Evaluated
| parent = Iguanidae
| genus1 = Amblyrhynchus
| species1 = cristatus
| link1 = Marine iguana
| genus2 = Conolophus
| species2 = subcristatus
| link2 = Galapagos land iguana
}}

The hybrid iguana is a first-generation hybrid, the result of intergeneric breeding between a male marine iguana (Amblyrhynchus cristatus) and a female Galapagos land iguana (Conolophus subcristatus) on South Plaza Island in the Galápagos Islands, where the territories of the two species overlap.

Hybrid iguanas are dark with light speckles or bands of mottling near the head and a banded body. By contrast, marine iguanas are a solid blackish color, while land iguanas are reddish-yellow; neither are banded.[1]

The first hybrid iguana was discovered in 1981. In 1997, high ocean temperatures during a severe El Niño season caused failure of the seaweed beds around the Galapagos Islands and about half the marine iguanas starved to death. Others searched inland for plants to eat. There they mated with the land iguanas, producing an unusual number of hybrid iguanas. As of 2003, twenty had been found. Four were known to be alive as of a 2013 census.[1] DNA testing by a German researcher revealed that marine iguanas were the fathers and land iguanas the mothers.[1]

A unique set of circumstances on South Plaza Island helps explain why the hybrids have been observed only there.[1] Elsewhere in the Galápagos, reproductive isolation between the two species is maintained by separation of breeding in both place and time: there is little overlap between the inland habitat favored by the land iguanas and the coastal habitat of the marine, and the short breeding seasons of the two species normally do not overlap. However, long, narrow South Plaza Island is so small that no place on it is far from the coast, leaving the land iguanas no place to retreat from invasion by their larger, more aggressive marine cousins. And on South Plaza there is a slight overlap between the end of the land iguana's breeding season and the beginning of the marine's, so that male marine iguanas forced inland by hunger may occasionally encounter a female land iguana still in breeding condition.[1]

Anatomy and morphology

Marine iguanas have sharp claws and are able to grip rock under seawater and eat seaweed, whereas land iguanas lack sharp claws, making them unable to climb the cacti that are their staple foods. Hybrid iguanas have sharp claws and can climb on cacti and also eat seaweed underwater. The hybrid iguana can survive in both sea and land environments.[2][3] Despite the long evolutionary separation between the two parent species, which are assigned to different genera, the offspring are viable, although likely sterile.[4] The hybrid iguanas have a laterally compressed tail like that of the marine iguanas, though they have not been seen swimming. They also have sharp claws like their marine fathers, which enable them to climb for food rather than waiting for it to drop from a cactus as the land iguanas do.[5]

References

1. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20161024-there-is-a-hidden-iguana-on-the-galpagos-and-nobody-noticed|title=There is a hidden iguana on the Galápagos and nobody noticed|last=Goldman|first=Jason G.|date=|website=BBC|language=en|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=2018-10-23}}
2. ^Source: Commemorating special TV program titled "地球危機2008" (Global crisis 2008) by TV Asahi, on 50th anniversary, on Jan. 4, 2008.
3. ^  TV Asahi program "素敵な宇宙船地球号" ("The earth", A Wonderful Vessel in the Universe) 2007 May 6
4. ^{{citation |last=Rassmann |first=Kornelia |last2=Markmann |first2=Melanie |last3=Trillmich |first3=Fritz |last4=Tautz |first4=Diethard |title=Tracing the Evolution of the Galapagos Iguanas |work=Iguanas: Biology and Conservation |publisher=University of California Press |location=California |pages=71–83 |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-520-23854-1}}
5. ^{{cite AV media |series= Wild Secrets: Worldwide Ecosystems|title= Galapagos: Evolution at the Speed of Life |work= NHK |year= 2003 |medium=DVD |others=Produced by Hiromichi Iwasaki, Hiroyuki Wakamatsu, Yasuhiro Koyama, Yoshiyuki Ohki}}

External links

  • Hybrid Iguana, Princeton University press
{{Iguanidae}}

9 : Animal breeding|Conolophus|Endemic fauna of the Galápagos Islands|Evolutionary biology|Hybrid animals|Iguanidae|Marine reptiles|Population genetics|Intergeneric hybrids

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