Nuns get hands dirty, and wet, to save Mexico salamander
Rolling up the sleeves of her immaculate white habit, Sister Ofelia
Morales Francisco plunges her hands into an aquarium, grabs a large,
slimy salamander and lifts it dripping into the air.
The nun is part of a team at a Dominican convent in Mexico that is
fighting to save the Lake Patzcuaro salamander, a critically endangered
species.
Revered as a god by the indigenous Purepecha people and keenly studied
by scientists, the salamander -- known for its stunning ability to
regenerate its body parts -- is found in the wild in only one place: the
lake near the Convent of Our Immaculate Lady of Health, in the western
town of Patzcuaro.
But the lake is badly polluted, and that is where Morales and her sisters come in.
They have launched a program to raise the salamanders in captivity, and
hope their efforts will one day help the species -- Ambystoma dumerilii
-- make a comeback in the wild.
It is a job that has required the nuns to step outside their routine of
charity and prayer, and get their hands dirty in a field they knew
little about at first.
AFP / ENRIQUE CASTRO
The endangered dark green Lake Patzcuaro salamanders are distinguished by a flowing mane of gills around their heads
That meant, for example, mastering the reproductive habits of the dark
green salamanders, which are distinguished by a flowing mane of gills
around their heads.
"The best way (to get them to copulate) is by mating a male with three
females," says Morales, who has been working on the project for 18
years.
Then comes an even trickier task.
"We have to raise the offspring very carefully, because they try to eat each other," she told AFP.
- Syrups and soups -
AFP / ENRIQUE CASTRO
Sisters Ofelia Morales Francisco (L) and Rosa Cortez are shown next to a
bottle of achoque (Ambystoma dumerilii) syrup produced by their convent
-- the elixir is reputed to cure anemia and chest infections and sells
for about $10 a bottle
The nuns of Our Immaculate Lady of Health did not start out trying to
save the salamanders, which are known locally as "achoques."
In fact, they started out by killing them.
More than a century ago, the convent began cooking the salamanders into a
syrup that is reputed to cure anemia and chest infections.
They likely borrowed the idea from the Purepecha, who worshipped the
salamander as the twin brother of the feathered serpent god Quetzalcoatl
and traditionally served it up in a soup.
The nuns' syrup sold so well it became the convent's main source of income.
So when the salamanders started to become scarce because of untreated
sewage, invasive carp and over-exploitation of the lake, the nuns
realized their convent's survival was at stake as well.
AFP / ENRIQUE CASTRO
Mexico's Lake Patzcuaro is the only place in the wild where the
endangered Ambystoma dumerilii salamander is found, and pollution has
led the nuns to breed the species in captivity
They invited a priest who also happened to be a trained biologist to teach them all about the achoque.
Today, they have some 300 salamanders in their care -- the maximum their two rooms of aquariums can hold.
It is more than enough to keep making their syrup, which sells for 200
pesos (about $10) a bottle, and give specimens to universities for
research.
Occasionally, a salamander still ends up in the nuns' own cooking pot.
"They make delicious soup," said Morales.
- Regenerative powers -
The achoque is a close relation of the axolotl (Ambystoma mexicanum),
another endangered salamander found only in the Xochimilco lake system
in Mexico City.
Both species are known for their capacity to regenerate their cells. If
one loses a tail, it quickly grows another, with no scar tissue.
They have the largest amount of DNA of any known species.
AFP / ENRIQUE CASTRO
A pair of Ambystoma dumerilii salamanders, popularly known as achoques, are shown in their home at the convent
That has made both salamanders a subject of fascination for scientists hoping to learn lessons that could apply to humans.
However, since the 1980s, the achoque's numbers have plunged
"dramatically," said Maria Esther Quintero, who works on protecting
endangered species for Mexico's National Commission on Biodiversity.
"There are very, very few achoques left in the wild," she told AFP.
The International Union for Conservation of Nature warns the Lake
Patzcuaro salamander "is believed to be in very serious decline, and
might be close to extinction."
The nuns are hoping their colony can help reverse that trend.
"We are trying to rescue this species to do justice for Mother Nature,"
said Sister Maria del Carmen Perez, another of the three nuns who staff
the aquarium.
"If we did nothing, it was going to vanish."
But for now, Lake Patzcuaro is too polluted to reintroduce them there.
Quintero said the immediate goal of Mexican officials is to clear invasive species from at least the northern part of the lake.
If that happens, perhaps the achoque can be returned to the waters
where, according to Purepecha legend, it hid at the dawn of time to
avoid being eaten.
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