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The Rarest of Darwin's Finches
Authors:Peter R Grant  & B Rosemary Grant
Institution:Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544-1003, U.S.A.
Abstract:The Mangrove Finch (Cactospiza heliobates) is unique among Darwin's finches in its specialized habits and naturally fragmented distribution on individual islands. It has been reported to occupy six patches of mangroves separated to varying degrees on two of the Galápagos islands, Isabela and Fernandina. We present the results of a field study in three of the patches. The species appears to have become extinct on Fernandina and to be restricted now to a maximum of four habitat islands on Isabela. In one of them, Playa Tortuga Negra, we estimate the population of breeding adults to be 10–20 pairs. At another, west of Villamil, the population size is probably now small due to the cutting of mangroves. The other two populations, close to each other east of Punta Moreno, probably hold the largest demes. Their status is unknown. We estimate that the genetically effective size of the combined populations is 30–380 individuals. Because the populations are so small and restricted, they are vulnerable to any disturbance of the environment. This has probably been so throughout their history because they inhabit a fragmented habitat in a tectonically active region. New anthropogenic threats this century are an introduced wasp (Polistes versicolor), which may be a predator on a major food item (insect larvae) of the finches, and destruction of the habitat. Protection of the occupied habitat against human exploitation is required for the preservation of the species because no alternative habitat is known.
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