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Post by surroundx on May 14, 2014 14:08:16 GMT
AbstractExtinctions and declines of large marine vertebrates have major ecological impacts and are of critical concern in marine environments. The Caribbean monk seal, Monachus tropicalis, last definitively reported in 1952, was one of the few marine mammal species to become extinct in historical times. Despite its importance for understanding the evolutionary biogeography of southern phocids, the relationships of M.tropicalis to the two living species of critically endangered monk seals have not been resolved. In this study we present the first molecular data for M. tropicalis, derived from museum skins. Phylogenetic analysis of cytochrome b sequences indicates that M. tropicalis was more closely related to the Hawaiian rather than the Mediterranean monk seal. Divergence time estimation implicates the formation of the Panamanian Isthmus in the speciation of Caribbean and Hawaiian monk seals. Molecular, morphological and temporal divergence between the Mediterranean and “New World monk seals” (Hawaiian and Caribbean) is profound, equivalent to or greater than between sister genera of phocids. As a result, we classify the Caribbean and Hawaiian monk seals together in a newly erected genus, Neomonachus. The two genera of extant monk seals (Monachus and Neomonachus) represent old evolutionary lineages each represented by a single critically endangered species, both warranting continuing and concerted conservation attention and investment if they are to avoid the fate of their Caribbean relative. Scheel, Dirk-Martin et al. (2014). Biogeography and taxonomy of extinct and endangered monk seals illuminated by ancient DNA and skull morphology. ZooKeys 409: 1-33.
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Post by surroundx on Jul 31, 2014 13:41:56 GMT
The IUCN Red List now treats this species in the genus Neomonachus ( fide Scheel et al. 2014): www.iucnredlist.org/details/summary/13655/0Although there has not actually been a new evaluation since 2008. Merely an unreported taxonomic change.
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Post by Melanie on Apr 10, 2015 8:27:25 GMT
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Post by koeiyabe on Nov 28, 2015 19:37:48 GMT
"Living Things Vanished from the Earth (in Japanese)" by Toshio Inomata (1993) with Anetia jaegeri (not extinct), Rhinthon bushi, and Battus polydamas antiquus (from left) and Cuban Macaw.
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Post by Melanie on Dec 14, 2016 20:52:49 GMT
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Post by surroundx on Aug 3, 2017 11:52:08 GMT
Mihnovets, Alicia Nicole. (2017). Historical and Contemporary Genetic Perspectives on New World Monk Seals (Genus Neomonachus). Columbia University Academic Commons, doi.org/10.7916/D880579B. [ Abstract]
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Post by Peter on Dec 26, 2017 20:13:46 GMT
In National Marine Fisheries Service's 'Endangered Species Act 5-Year Review for the Caribbean Monk Seal (Monachus tropicalis)' they write "The only known photographs of Caribbean monk seals in the wild appear in Adam and Garcia (2003)". Has someone read this paper or seen these photographs of wild specimens? NMFS (2008). Endangered Species Act 5-Year Review for the Caribbean Monk Seal (Monachus tropicalis). National Marine Fisheries Service Southeast Regional Office, St. Petersburg, Florida, March 7, 2008: 1-20. www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/species/caribbeanmonkseal_5year.pdfAdam, P. J., and G. G. Garcia. (2003). New information on the natural history, distribution, and skull of the extinct (?) West Indian monk seal, Monachus tropicalis. Marine Mammal Science 19:297–317.
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Post by Melanie on Dec 26, 2017 20:55:43 GMT
In National Marine Fisheries Service's 'Endangered Species Act 5-Year Review for the Caribbean Monk Seal (Monachus tropicalis)' they write "The only known photographs of Caribbean monk seals in the wild appear in Adam and Garcia (2003)". Has someone read this paper or seen these photographs of wild specimens? NMFS (2008). Endangered Species Act 5-Year Review for the Caribbean Monk Seal (Monachus tropicalis). National Marine Fisheries Service Southeast Regional Office, St. Petersburg, Florida, March 7, 2008: 1-20. www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/species/caribbeanmonkseal_5year.pdfAdam, P. J., and G. G. Garcia. (2003). New information on the natural history, distribution, and skull of the extinct (?) West Indian monk seal, Monachus tropicalis. Marine Mammal Science 19:297–317. I have this paper. The photographes are in very poor quality where you can barely see the monk seals. The text under the figure state:
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Post by surroundx on Jan 28, 2018 9:54:30 GMT
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Post by Melanie on Mar 28, 2018 17:51:48 GMT
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Post by surroundx on Apr 25, 2018 5:36:12 GMT
LeBoeuf, B.J., Kenyon, K.W. and Villa-Ramirez, B. (1986). The Caribbean monk seal is extinct. Marine Mammal Science 2: 70-72. [ Abstract]
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Post by surroundx on Apr 13, 2019 13:12:11 GMT
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Post by koeiyabe on Aug 6, 2023 4:14:40 GMT
"Atlas of Extinct Animals (in Japanese)" by Radek Maly (2022)
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Post by Sebbe on Sept 29, 2024 12:02:54 GMT
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Post by redpinnipedgamer on Oct 8, 2024 6:51:17 GMT
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Post by redpinnipedgamer on Oct 8, 2024 6:54:25 GMT
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