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Captive breeding, or captive propagation, is a conservation strategy that involves cultivating endangered plant species in controlled environments such as botanic gardens and seed banks to prevent extinction. For plant science, this approach is critical for preserving genetic diversity and studying rare species that can no longer be sustained in their native habitats due to climate change, habitat destruction, or other human pressures. It also provides researchers with stable plant populations for studying reproductive biology, germination requirements, and reintroduction protocols aimed at restoring species to the wild.

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Effects of environmental setting and diet on the gut microbial ecology of eastern hellbenders (Cryptobranchus alleganiensis alleganiensis).

PubMed · 2026-04-16

Zoo-raised hellbenders (large aquatic salamanders) have far less diverse gut bacteria than wild ones, but switching them to a wild diet helps restore that microbial balance—and their gut communities continue shifting toward wild-type after release into natural habitats.

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Zoo-reared hellbenders showed significantly reduced bacterial richness compared to wild individuals, indicating captivity suppresses microbiome diversity.

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Introducing a wild diet in zoo settings modulated the gut microbiome, with change primarily driven by bacterial species turnover rather than abundance shifts.

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Both bacterial and fungal gut communities restructured after release into natural habitat, trending toward wild-type composition—suggesting microbiome recovery is possible post-reintroduction.

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