{"title":"保护中的分子转向:遗传学,原始自然,以及重新发现一种灭绝物种Galápagos巨龟","authors":"Elizabeth Hennessy","doi":"10.1080/00045608.2014.960042","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Genetic science is an increasingly common tool in conservation management that is reshaping understandings of biodiversity and how best to “save” it. In the Galápagos Islands, genetic science has led to the rediscovery of a species of giant tortoise that by all accounts went extinct more than 150 years ago. This article uses the story of these tortoises to examine how one area of conservation genetics—reconstructions of evolutionary history, or phylogenetics—is contributing to a shift in the way pristine nature is understood and managed. Drawing on political ecologies and critical geographies of genetics, I trace the story of these tortoises, which are at the center of a conservation breeding and repatriation program aimed to “retortoise” an island with tortoises as genetically close to the original population as possible. 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引用次数: 16
摘要
遗传科学是保护管理中越来越普遍的工具,它正在重塑对生物多样性的理解,以及如何最好地“拯救”它。在Galápagos群岛,基因科学重新发现了一种巨型乌龟,据说这种乌龟在150多年前就灭绝了。这篇文章用这些陆龟的故事来研究保护遗传学的一个领域——进化历史的重建,或系统发育学——是如何促成对原始自然的理解和管理方式的转变的。根据政治生态学和遗传学的关键地理学,我追溯了这些陆龟的故事,它们是保护繁殖和遣返计划的中心,该计划旨在使一个岛屿的陆龟在基因上尽可能接近原始种群。我认为基因是新兴的保护对象,它不仅唤起了知识生产的新配置,而且为管理濒危自然开辟了新的可能性。乌龟“基因组地理学”(Fujimura and Rajagopalan 2011;纳什(Nash 2013)对特定岛屿的谱系进行追踪,阐明了对生态恢复中受到威胁的原始自然的两种理解:长期以来构成国家公园保护的岛屿的有限笛卡尔空间和物种谱系的纯洁性,基因技术为理解和操纵提供了新的手段。将基因作为保护对象进行分析,为批判性分析打开了一个技术-科学的黑盒子,将新技术用于想象原始自然,这是关于保护管理的争论历史。
The Molecular Turn in Conservation: Genetics, Pristine Nature, and the Rediscovery of an Extinct Species of Galápagos Giant Tortoise
Genetic science is an increasingly common tool in conservation management that is reshaping understandings of biodiversity and how best to “save” it. In the Galápagos Islands, genetic science has led to the rediscovery of a species of giant tortoise that by all accounts went extinct more than 150 years ago. This article uses the story of these tortoises to examine how one area of conservation genetics—reconstructions of evolutionary history, or phylogenetics—is contributing to a shift in the way pristine nature is understood and managed. Drawing on political ecologies and critical geographies of genetics, I trace the story of these tortoises, which are at the center of a conservation breeding and repatriation program aimed to “retortoise” an island with tortoises as genetically close to the original population as possible. I argue that genes are emerging objects of conservation that not only call forth new configurations of knowledge production but also open new possibilities for managing endangered natures. Tortoise “genome geographies” (Fujimura and Rajagopalan 2011; Nash 2013) that trace lineages to particular islands articulate two understandings of pristine nature at stake in ecological restoration: the bounded Cartesian space of islands that has long structured national park conservation and the purity of species lineages, which genetic technologies offer a new means for understanding and manipulating. Analyzing genes as objects of conservation opens a technical–scientific black box to critical analysis, placing new technologies for imagining pristine nature in a history of debate about conservation management.