An academic publishing model in which journals do not charge fees to either authors or readers.

Average time for first decision (excluding desk-rejections): 5 weeks

Animal Biodiversity and Conservation. Volume 41.2 (2018) Pages: 357-364

Microsatellite variability of the wood stork Mycteria americana (Aves, Ciconidae) in Cuba: implications for its conservation

Llanes-Quevedo, A., Alfonso González, M., Cárdenas Mena, R., Frankel, C., Espinosa Lopez, G.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.32800/abc.2018.41.0357

Download

PDF

Abstract

Mycteria americana (Aves, Ciconiidae) is the only species of stork found in the Caribbean. It is a permanent yet rare resident in Cuba, with only two reproductively active colonies. In this work, we used five microsatellite loci to characterize 37 individuals from these colonies, located in two of the most important wetlands of Cuba, the Zapata Swamp and the Sabana–Camagüey Archipelago. We found low genetic variability, with similar values to those reported for North and South American populations of the species, and little but significant genetic differentiation between colonies. Our results highlight the need to improve the management and conservation planning of the species in Cuba because the combination of low genetic variation, small colonies, anthropogenic influence and climatic factors could threaten its persistence.

Keywords

Genetic diversity, Genetic structure, Waterbirds, Wetlands

Cite

Llanes-Quevedo, A., Alfonso González, M., Cárdenas Mena, R., Frankel, C., Espinosa Lopez, G., 2018. Microsatellite variability of the wood stork Mycteria americana (Aves, Ciconidae) in Cuba: implications for its conservation. Animal Biodiversity and Conservation, 41: 357-364, DOI: https://doi.org/10.32800/abc.2018.41.0357

Reception date:

03/11/2017

Acceptation date:

19/01/2018

Publication date:

02/08/2018

Share

Visits

1640

Downloads

616

Content appears on: