Local citizen scientists map genetics of Darwin’s Galapagos

24 August 2021, 14:24

Scientists walk with locals as they collect plant samples on the Galapagos
Ecuador Galapagos Gene Hunters. Picture: PA

The Barcode Galapagos Project uses local people to gather, prepare and process tiny samples in DNA sequencing machines set up in three laboratories.

An innovative project in the remote Galapagos Islands has turned dozens of local inhabitants into citizen scientists at a time when the pandemic caused tourist income to dry up.

The participants have been hired and trained to sample the genetic diversity in the small island chain that famously inspired Charles Darwin in his description of evolution.

They gather, prepare and process tiny samples in DNA sequencing machines. That is creating a catalogue of thousands of species, some local and others imported.

They can be compared with similar samples from around the world.

Farmer Sandra Simbana and tour guide Juan Garcia extract soil samples to be analysed
Farmer Sandra Simbana and tour guide Juan Garcia extract soil samples to be analysed (Dolores Ochoa/AP)

Robin Betancourt was one of 74 Galapagos residents to take part.

Five months into the pandemic, things were getting desperate for Mr Betancourt as the tourists he depended upon as a boat captain were unable to visit the islands, whose isolation – 600 miles from the mainland – makes alternative employment hard to find.

It hit him hard when when he could not find a little money for his five-year-old daughter Zulyn to buy a pastry. Then science stepped in.

“The project was a salvation, but also a challenge,” he said. “I only knew how to turn on the computer to play music; I didn’t know how to operate the thing.”

“Now I’m part of a citizen science project. I’m a citizen scientist, look at that!”

Robin Betancourt
Robin Betancourt was one of 74 Galapagos residents to take part (Dolores Ochoa/AP)

The Barcode Galapagos Project uses local people to gather, prepare and process tiny samples in DNA sequencing machines set up in three laboratories on the islands.

They search the soil and dip into the sea to collect samples left by the islands’ plant and animal life, from large to microscopic.

The samples are run through the machines to determine short DNA sequences, producing barcode identifiers or fingerprints of thousands of species that can be compared with similar samples from elsewhere across the world.

“We are making a genetic catalogue of the biodiversity of the Galapagos. We want to obtain the genetic signature of the species of the Galapagos and quantify the variation of each one due to the geographical isolation in which they are found,” said Diego Ortiz, manager of the project.

So far, the Charles Darwin Scientific Station has registered 10,659 species – some endemic and others introduced – ranging from mammals to bonefish to snakes, fungi and plants, plankton and bacteria.

Scientists walk with locals as they collect plant samples
Scientists walk with locals as they collect plant samples (Dolores Ochoa/AP)

The researchers said about 30-40% of the species they have found so far do not match any others in a global bank of gene sequences.

The project involves researchers from Ecuador’s University of San Francisco; the University of Exeter in England, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Galapagos Science Centre.

Funding has come from UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) through the Global Challenges Research Fund and the Newton Fund.

UKRI said it is one of several projects meant to “mitigate the short and long-term social, economic and health consequences” of the Covid-19 pandemic.

“This is the first science project in the Galapagos that has been done with Galapagos citizens, which we have always wanted to participate in, but hadn’t been given the opportunity,” said Jhosellyn Aguas, a 35-year-old naturalist and guide. “I’m happy to be doing science.”

By Press Association

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