Journal article

Did hybridization save the Norfolk Island boobook owl Ninox novaeseelandiae undulata?

ST Garnett, P Olsen, SHM Butchart, AA Hoffmann

ORYX | CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS | Published : 2011

Abstract

The population of the Norfolk Island boobook owl Ninox novaeseelandiae undulata, a nocturnal bird restricted to the Australian territory of Norfolk Island, was reduced to a single female in 1986. Deliberate introduction of two males of its nearest relative, the New Zealand boobook N. n. novaeseelandiae, as a conservation intervention has allowed the taxon to persist on Norfolk Island, albeit in hybrid form. Although declared Extinct in 2000, a re-examination of this unique situation has concluded there is a strong argument that the taxon should be categorized as Critically Endangered because, on average, approximately half the nuclear genome of the original taxon and all the mitochondrial DN..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Awarded by Laureate Fellowship


Funding Acknowledgements

Thanks to David Priddel of the New South Wales National Park Service for resuscitating this issue. This work was supported by Australian Research Council Grants LP0990395 (Increasing the effectiveness of Australian threatened bird conservation) and Laureate Fellowship grant FL100100066.