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		Galapagos tortoises belong to new species -nat'l park
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		 [March 12, 2022] 
		By Alexandra Valencia 
 QUITO (Reuters) - Scientists have 
		discovered that a type of giant tortoise present on one of Ecuador's 
		Galapagos Islands is not from the species it was previously thought to 
		be, Galapagos National Park said.
 
 A study concluded that the giant tortoises living on San Cristobal 
		island, previously identified as Chelonoidis chathamensis, correspond 
		genetically to a different species, the park said in a statement late on 
		Thursday.
 
 "The scientists concluded that nearly 8,000 tortoises which exist today 
		on San Cristobal are not Chelonoidis chathamensis but correspond to a 
		completely new lineage that has not yet been described," the park said.
 
 The discovery was made through a genetic comparison of the animals with 
		a sample from the already described species, the statement added, in a 
		study conducted by Newcastle University, Yale University and the 
		Galapagos Conservancy.
 
 The lineage previously thought to correspond to the San Cristobal 
		tortoises may belong to an extinct species that cohabited with the 
		surviving one, the statement said.
 
		
		 
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			A tortoise, previously identified as Chelonoidis chathamensis and 
			which corresponds genetically to a different species according to a 
			study by scientists of the Galapagos National Park, is pictured on 
			the island of San Cristobal, Galapagos Islands, Ecuador February 13, 
			2019. Picture taken February 13, 2019. Galapagos National 
			Park/Handout via REUTERS 
            
			 "The team of investigators is 
			recovering more DNA from the species thought to be extinct to 
			clarify the state of the tortoises and determine how these two 
			species (the living and the extinct) relate," the statement said. 
			"For them, the name Chelonoidis chathamensis should be assigned to 
			the disappeared species and the living taxon should receive a new 
			name." Genetic studies of surviving Galapagos tortoises 
			began in 1995 and four years later scientists began studying samples 
			form extinct species.
 The Galapagos -- whose rich biodiversity inspired Charles Darwin's 
			theory of evolution -- is home to a large variety of flamingos, 
			albatross and cormorants.
 
 Ecuador recently extended the marine reserve around the islands by 
			60,000 square kilometers (23,166 square miles).l
 
 (Reporting by Alexandra Valencia; Writing by Julia Symmes Cobb; 
			Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
 
 
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