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FLORA AND FAUNA
Hybridization helps species avoid extinction
by Brooks Hays
Riverside, Calif. (UPI) Aug 8, 2016


Endangered California condors eating contaminated carrion
San Diego (UPI) Aug 8, 2016 - California condors are making a comeback. But now conservationists worry the endangered species' diet is putting the birds are risk.

Marine mammals are an abundant food source, but they're also a repository for contaminants accumulating in the ocean. New research shows coastal condors in Central California have higher levels of pesticides and other toxins than their peers living farther inland.

Condors are equal opportunity consumers, feeding on animal carcasses of all kinds. On the coast, marine mammal carcasses are plentiful.

Initially, scientists were encouraged by the dietary trend. Condors can get lead poisoning from feeding on land mammals killed by lead-tipped bullets.

The new research, published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology, suggests marine mammal consumption isn't any safer.

"The problem with condors eating marine mammals is that they contain significant amounts of contaminants that have been shown to harm reproduction in other birds and are therefore a potential threat to the ongoing recovery of California condors," Carolyn Kurle, an assistant professor of biology at University of California, San Diego, said in a news release.

Kurle and her colleagues found both marine mammals and coastal condors in Central California possessed significant levels of DDE, a derivative of the now-banned pesticide DDT. Forty percent of the tested breeding-age coastal condors possessed DDE concentrations on par with levels that caused eggshell thinning in studies involving bald eagles. Roughly 20 percent had DDE levels associated with bald eagle nest failure.

"DDE is highly persistent and can accumulate in apex predators such as California sea lions and California condors," said Victoria Bakker of Montana State University. "Our results indicate that ongoing marine foraging elevates DDE levels in condors, even for birds just entering the population today."

Some species are more likely to resemble their parents than others. It depends on how genes are passed from generation to generation.

Humans get two copies of each of their 23 chromosomes, one from each parent. Humans are diploids. Polyploids, on the other hand, have several copies of their chromosomes, encouraging hybridization.

Unlike some hybrids, polyploid hybrids are fertile -- capable of producing offspring.

A new study, published in the journal Nature Plants, reveals an evolutionary advantage of hybridization among polyploid plant hybrids in the genus Nicotiana, often referred to as tobacco plants.

Nicotiana polyploid hybrids featured shorter, wider flowers to encourage pollination by a greater variety of species.

The approach of polyploid hybrids, which privileges generalization over specialization, is aided by the plants' ability to differentiate themselves from their parents.

The latest findings reveal nature's response to the problem of overspecialization, whereby flowers become too reliant on a specific pollinator or vice versa, and risk considerable losses should their evolutionary partner fade away.

"Some plants evolve increasingly specialized relationships with the species that pollinate them," lead researcher Elizabeth McCarthy, a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Riverside, said in a press release.

"Classic example is Darwin's Madagascan orchid, first discovered in 1798. Its exceptionally long nectar spur led Charles Darwin to propose that it was pollinated by a moth whose proboscis -- the organ that extracts the nectar -- was longer than that of any moth known at the time," McCarthy added. "Darwin's prediction was spectacularly verified 21 years after his death when just such a moth was discovered."


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