Captive Alligators Breed in Wild
A newly discovered set of 15 baby alligator hatchlings marks the successful breeding of a group of once-captive gators that now lives in the wild, it was announced this week.
The baby Chinese alligators, a species that grows to be somewhat smaller than adult American alligators, emerged as part of a 10-year effort to reintroduce these endangered reptiles on Chongming Island, located at the mouth of the Yangtze River in China.
The alligator group that gave birth to the new hatchlings includes four animals from the Wildlife Conservation Society's Bronx Zoo.
"This is fantastic news," said WCS researcher Dr. John Thorbjarnarson, a participant in the project. "The success of this small population suggests that there's hope for bringing the Chinese alligator back to some parts of its former distribution."American alligators, which live in wetlands in the southeastern United States, are the only other living species of alligators. They are not endangered.
The Chinese alligator once inhabited a much larger watershed area in Eastern China. However, it is now the most threatened of the crocodilians in the world today, Thorbjarnarson said, and is listed as "critically endangered" on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species.
Back in 1999, the WCS, along with the Anhui Forestry Bureau and the East China Normal University, conducted a survey of Chinese alligators in the Anhui Province — the only remaining location where these reptiles are still found in the wild. The results were bleak, with fewer than 130 animals estimated to be in the population.In 2001, an international workshop recommended that captive alligator species be placed back into the wild. Then, .......
http://www.livescience.com/animals/090715-baby-alligators.html
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