Biodiversity Information Science and Standards :
Conference Abstract
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Corresponding author: Sofie Meeus (sofie.meeus@plantentuinmeise.be)
Received: 23 Aug 2022 | Published: 07 Sep 2022
© 2022 Sofie Meeus, Jodey Peyton, Catherine Childs, Sarita Francis, Luke Harding, Annick Jackman, Rebecca Machin, Mike Pienkowski, Eulyn Silcott-Greaves, Sabina Vlad, Catherine Wensink, Quentin Groom
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Citation:
Meeus S, Peyton J, Childs C, Francis S, Harding L, Jackman A, Machin R, Pienkowski M, Silcott-Greaves E, Vlad SE, Wensink C, Groom Q (2022) Re-connecting Communities in Biodiverse Places to their Biological Heritage: The case of iguanas on Grand Cayman. Biodiversity Information Science and Standards 6: e93887. https://doi.org/10.3897/biss.6.93887
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For centuries, naturalists from the Global North have traveled southwards to collect specimens of species from regions where there were many. The legacy of this is that the large natural history collections and the biodiverse regions of the world are often distant from one another. The unique and often disappearing species and ecosystems in these regions need conservation, yet much of the data on this biodiversity resides in collections and with the experts that work in them, rather than in the countries where it is needed.
In this poster we zoom in on Grand Cayman, a small island in the Caribbean, facing severe threats to its endemic biodiversity - from habitat loss to introduced species. More specifically we focus on the endemic blue iguana (Cyclura lewisi) and the invasive green iguana (Iguana iguana). Specimens from the Cayman Islands are dispersed over American and European natural history collections and give data on the species present, their abundances and the interactions among those species (e.g. their food plants and parasites). Such data can be used in risk assessments and conservation planning, and the specimens themselves can inform research, such as population genetics.
While the Cayman Islands are small they provide an excellent case study of the issues of conservation, society, climate and other environmental change in the tropics. Islands are highly sensitive to environmental change, but the lessons learned from them can be extended to other areas, including continents. On this poster, we describe the From Blue Iguanas to Blue Vervain project (Fig.
Natural history collections, invasive species, Caribbean UK Overseas Territories, access and benefit-sharing, islands, species interactions, Cayman Islands, Blue Iguana, Iguana iguana.
Sofie Meeus
TDWG 2022
From Blue Iguanas to Blue Vervain is a project funded by the UKRI Arts & Humanities Research Council and Natural Environment Research Council (grant reference AH/W008998/1).
In addition, Sofie Meeus acknowledges the support of the Leopold III Funds and The Research Foundation – Flanders (FWO).
From blue iguanas to blue vervain: sharing the colonial histories from the UK Overseas Territories
UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology