Quantcast
Channel: genetic diversity – ConservationBytes.com
Browsing latest articles
Browse All 27 View Live

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

De-extinction is about as sensible as de-death

© http://imgur.com/user/Stumbleine Published simultaneously in The Conversation. – On Friday, March 15 in Washington DC, National Geographic and TEDx are hosting a day-long conference on...

View Article



Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

We’re sorry, but 50/500 is still too few

Some of you who are familiar with my colleagues’ and my work will know that we have been investigating the minimum viable population size concept for years (see references at the end of this post)....

View Article

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

50/500 or 100/1000 debate not about time frame

As you might recall, Dick Frankham, Barry Brook and I recently wrote a review in Biological Conservation challenging the status quo regarding the famous 50/500 ‘rule’ in conservation management...

View Article

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

High-altitude ecology

A constant hazard in the Tibetan Plateau – yakjam I’ve been out of the social-media loop for a few weeks, hence the abnormally long interval since my last post. As you might recall, I’ve been...

View Article

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

Avoiding genetic rescue not justified on genetic grounds

I had the pleasure today of reading a new paper by one of the greatest living conservation geneticists, Dick Frankham. As some of CB readers might remember, I’ve also published some papers with Dick...

View Article


Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

Outright bans of trophy hunting could do more harm than good

In July 2015 an American dentist shot and killed a male lion called ‘Cecil’ with a hunting bow and arrow, an act that sparked a storm of social media outrage. Cecil was a favourite of tourists visiting...

View Article

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

Getting your conservation science to the right people

A perennial lament of nearly every conservation scientist — at least at some point (often later in one’s career) — is that the years of blood, sweat and tears spent to obtain those precious results...

View Article

Image may be NSFW.
Clik here to view.

Genetic Management of Fragmented Animal and Plant Populations

That is the title of a new textbook that will be available mid-2017. After almost 6 years work, authors Dick Frankham, Jonathan Ballou, Katherine Ralls, Mark Eldridge, Michele Dudash, Charles Fenster,...

View Article


Why populations can’t be saved by a single breeding pair

I published this last week on The Conversation, and now reproducing it here for CB.com readers. —   Two days ago, the last male northern white rhino (Ceratotherium simum cottoni) died. His passing...

View Article


Translocations: the genetic rescue paradox

Harvesting and habitat alteration reduce many populations to just a few individuals, and then often extinction. A widely recommended conservation action is to supplement those populations with new...

View Article

The biggest go first

The saying “it isn’t rocket science” is a common cliché in English to state, rather sarcastically, that something isn’t that difficult (with the implication that the person complaining about it, well,...

View Article

Error-free genetic repositories: case of amphibians

In our new study, we curated > 39,000 amphibian mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences from GenBank, identified > 2,000 sequencing and taxonomic errors, and published the quality-checked records as...

View Article

New journal: Frontiers in Conservation Science

Several months ago, Daniel Blumstein of UCLA approached me with an offer — fancy leading a Special Section in a new Frontiers journal dedicated to conservation science? I admit that my gut reaction was...

View Article


Smart genetic analysis made fast and easy

If you use genetics to differentiate populations, the new package smartsnp might be your new friend. Written in R language and available from GitHub and CRAN, this package does principal component...

View Article

Can we resurrect the thylacine? Maybe, but it won’t help the global...

(published first on The Conversation) Last week, researchers at the University of Melbourne announced that thylacines or Tasmanian tigers, the Australian marsupial predators extinct since the 1930s,...

View Article


Should we bring back the thylacine? We asked 5 experts

Signe Dean, The Conversation In a newly announced partnership with Texas biotech company Colossal Biosciences, Australian researchers are hoping their dream to bring back the extinct thylacine is a...

View Article

Influential conservation papers of 2022

Following my annual tradition, I present the retrospective list of the ‘top’ 20 influential papers of 2022 as assessed by experts in Faculty Opinions (formerly known as F1000). These are in no...

View Article


Open Letter: Public policy in South Australia regarding dingoes

08 August 2023 The Honourable Dr Susan Close MP, Deputy Premier and Minister for Climate, Environment and Water, South Australia The Honourable Claire Scriven MLC, Minister for Primary Industries and...

View Article
Browsing latest articles
Browse All 27 View Live




Latest Images