sp Full-range Bird Products!Green Tips & Products
Pet Bird Web | Breeder's Web | Birding / Wildlife Web | Home & Health Avianweb: Contact / Home

Resources

The Impact of Plastic Waste on our Oceans

Bird Species

Seychelles Kestrels

Birds of Prey ... The Sport of Falconry

Seychelles KestrelThe Seychelles Kestrel, F. araea is the smallest of all kestrels, otherwise similar to the Madagascar Kestrel (and originally considered the same species). Its diet is mainly lizards.

Its range is reduced to Mahé, with a few pairs on Silhouette Island and Praslin. The species status is "Vulnerable."


Research conducted by Dr Jim Groombridge's (Royal Society Research Grant):

Searching for evidence of a historical population bottleneck in the Seychelles kestrel: microsatellite genotyping of 100-140-year-old museum specimens.

The Mauritius kestrel is believed to have experienced a population bottleneck of a single pair in 1974. Dr. Groombridge's previous genetic work (Groombridge et al. Nature 2000) showed current microsatellite diversity in this species to be low, compared to unusually high ancestral levels sampled from pre-bottleneck museum skins. A broader survey of current diversity in other kestrels showed the Seychelles kestrel population to be similarly impoverished, but historical records suggest that this species did not undergo a bottleneck of similar severity.

The Seychelles population did not require intensive recovery, and today persists in high numbers. This scenario presents an opportunity to investigate the genetic effects of historical population bottlenecks for island endemics: both kestrel species have similarly low genetic diversity today, but differ in their histories of population size. Geographically, Mauritius is a single large island, whereas the Seychelles archipelago is made up of many smaller islands, which comprised the ancestral range of the Seychelles kestrel. In addition, our knowledge of the evolutionary history of kestrel colonisation across the Indian Ocean islands is based upon a molecular phylogeny (Groombridge et al. Mol. Phylog. Evol. 2002).

This current research project at the University of Kent involves the use of microsatellite markers to genotype DNA extracted from sampled museum specimens, and to compare those levels of genetic diversity to that retained by the current population on the Seychelles. The genetic work is being carried out partly at DICE, University of Kent, and partly at the NERC Sheffield Molecular Genetics Facility, University of Sheffield. Museum collections throughout the UK, Europe, and elsewhere are being used.

Source: DICE - University of Kent




Photo, Video and/or Article contributions are welcome! Please click here for info

The Avianweb strives to maintain accurate and up-to-date information; however, mistakes do happen. If you would like to correct or update any of the information, please send us an e-mail. THANK YOU!

Bird Watching Products


Cameras: The Latest Styles at Great Prices!

Bird Houses / Nesting Boxes: From Build-Your-Own to Collectibles and Practical Easy-Care Nest Boxes

Books and Movies for Kids


Electronics

Environmentally safe, non-toxic products for your home:



Home | © Copyright 2006 AvianWeb LLC - Disclaimers | For questions or comments, please contact Website Administrator: Sibylle Faye

All content posted on this site is commentary or opinion and is protected under Free Speech. The information on this site is provided for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not intended as a substitute for professional advice of any kind. The Avianweb assumes no responsibility for the use or misuse of this material. Your use of this website indicates your agreement to these terms and those published here. All trademarks, registered trademarks and servicemarks mentioned on this site are the property of their respective owners.