Successful Establishment of a Non-Native Species after an Apparent Single Introduction Event: Investigating ND4 Variability in Introduced Black Spiny-Tailed Iguanas (Ctenosaura similis) in Southwestern Florida
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- Title
- Successful Establishment of a Non-Native Species after an Apparent Single Introduction Event: Investigating ND4 Variability in Introduced Black Spiny-Tailed Iguanas (Ctenosaura similis) in Southwestern Florida
- Creators
- Andrea M Naccarato - Florida Gulf Coast UniversityJan B Dejarnette - Florida Gulf Coast UniversityPhil Allman - Florida Gulf Coast University
- Publication Details
- Journal of herpetology, Vol.49(2), pp.230-236
- Publisher
- the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles
- Number of pages
- 7
- Grant note
- Ave Maria University
We acknowledge E. Quintero from Ave Maria University for generous assistance with DNA amplification procedures and funding for sequencing, as well as R. Bullens of FGCU for providing laboratory space and materials for dissections. We acknowledge E. Everham and J. Jackson of FGCU for editing earlier versions of this manuscript and serving on the project committee. We thank W. Gurley of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for assistance with GIS mapping. We are grateful to the students of the FGCU Herpetology Research Lab for their assistance in the field and lab: D. De Witt, J. Donini, S. Funck, L. Hamilton, B. Jackson, J. Knott, and J. Ross. Finally, this project would not have been possible without the good-natured cooperation from staff at the Conservancy of Southwest Florida, FWC, and RBNERR. The Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee at Florida Gulf Coast University approved the methods used in this study (IACUC protocol no. 0910-04).
- Identifiers
- 99383409456506570
- Academic Unit
- Department of Biological Sciences
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article