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Shedding subspecies: The influence of genetics on reptile . . . We evaluated recent reptile literature for bias in the recommendations regarding subspecies status when genetic data were included Reviewing characteristics of the study, genetic variables, genetic distance values and noting the species concepts, we found that subspecies were more likely elevated to species when using genetic analysis
Environmental DNA (eDNA): Powerful technique for biodiversity . . . Environmental DNA (eDNA) is a revolutionary method to the study of biodiversity of any environment Traditional methods of fish stock assessment are largely carried out using visual surveys, trawls, seines, and tissue biopsies, which are costly, time-consuming, invasive, environmentally harmful, and prone to misidentification
Question 5 Explanation_Digital SAT Mock Test 9, Section 1 . . . · In a 2021 study, Anusuya Chinsamy-Turan analyzed fragments of pterosaur jawbones located in the Sahara Desert · She was initially unsure if the bones belonged to juvenile or adult pterosaurs · She used advanced microscope techniques to determine that the bones had few growth lines relative to the bones of fully grown pterosaurs
Addressing knowledge gaps in reptile conservation Reptiles are the most species-rich group of terrestrial vertebrates, yet we lack a comprehensive understanding of their extinction risk Only 45% of described reptile species have been assessed by IUCN to date (4648 of 10,400 species); of these, 20% (945 species) are threatened with extinction, and 19% (867 species) are Data Deficient
Reptile Database News This update has 12,263 species (up from 12,162 reptile species in the March 2024 release) and 2,106 subspecies (excluding nominate subspecies), that is, a total of 14,369 taxa 101 new entries have been added to the release, with a total of 160 species-level changes, including 94 new species and 2 new genera (Neopalaia, a skink, and Desertum
Reptile and amphibian invasive species have cost $16. 3bn . . . Two invasive species, one reptile and one amphibian, have cost the world more than $16 billion in damage, scientists have found The brown tree snake and American bullfrog caused $10 3 billion and $6 billion in damage, respectively, between 1986 and 2020