La Sierra University, Germany zoo partner in first U.S. tiger gecko ‘ark’ program

 

RIVERSIDE, Calf. – While countries attending a United Nations summit the third week of December grappled over the details of another global conservation plan, some scientists carried on with their own methods of preventing the decimation of species struggling to survive in pockets of planet Earth.

<p> Left to right, Dr. Jesse Grismer, La Sierra University assistant biology professor, biology student Sarah Goymer, and Dr. Lee Grismer, La Sierra biology professor. </p>

Left to right, Dr. Jesse Grismer, La Sierra University assistant biology professor, biology student Sarah Goymer, and Dr. Lee Grismer, La Sierra biology professor.

<p> Biology student Sarah Goymer holds a <em>Pituophis catenifer annectens</em>, a San Diego Gopher Snake from Thomas Mountain that was collected last spring quarter during her herpetology class.  </p>

Biology student Sarah Goymer holds a Pituophis catenifer annectens, a San Diego Gopher Snake from Thomas Mountain that was collected last spring quarter during her herpetology class. 

<p> Left to right: Visiting Fulbright scholar Lưu Quang Vinh, Lee Grismer, Dan Portik, Jeren Gregory, and Sarah Goymer on a Southern California field expedition. </p>

Left to right: Visiting Fulbright scholar Lưu Quang Vinh, Lee Grismer, Dan Portik, Jeren Gregory, and Sarah Goymer on a Southern California field expedition.

<p> The aquarium at the Cologne Zoological Garden in Germany. </p>

The aquarium at the Cologne Zoological Garden in Germany.

<p> Sarah Goymer, right, works with a conservation team during Thanksgiving break at the Cologne Zoo aquarium in Germany learning to care for threatened tiger geckos. With her are, left to right, Anna Rauhaus and Christian Niggemann. </p>

Sarah Goymer, right, works with a conservation team during Thanksgiving break at the Cologne Zoo aquarium in Germany learning to care for threatened tiger geckos. With her are, left to right, Anna Rauhaus and Christian Niggemann.

<p> Vietnamese tiger gecko eggs. </p>

Vietnamese tiger gecko eggs.

<p> Brightly colored tiger geckos at the Cologne Zoo conservation program in Germany. </p>

Brightly colored tiger geckos at the Cologne Zoo conservation program in Germany.

<p> La Sierra University undergraduates and gecko ark caretaking team, left to right, Alexandria Falvo, Sarah Goymer, and Jeren Geregory during an outing to Truckhaven Rocks in Anza Borrego State Park in Southern California. </p>

La Sierra University undergraduates and gecko ark caretaking team, left to right, Alexandria Falvo, Sarah Goymer, and Jeren Geregory during an outing to Truckhaven Rocks in Anza Borrego State Park in Southern California.

These include a contingent of herpetologists from La Sierra University and the Cologne Zoological Garden in Germany who last month embarked on a project slated to take place at La Sierra this school year – a conservation breeding program designed to mitigate the extinction of five threatened tiger gecko species native to Vietnam. It is referred to as a modern ark by Thomas Ziegler, Cologne Zoo aquarium curator and coordinator of biodiversity and nature conservation projects in Vietnam and Laos. It will function as the first such program in the U.S. for the vulnerable tiger geckos which have been bred thus far by Ziegler’s team at the zoo and support stations in Vietnam in an effort to ensure their continued existence.

The ark concept of breeding threatened animals in satellite locations ensures the survival of the species in the event of natural disasters, political unrest, disease outbreak or other harmful activities in the country of origin, Ziegler said. “Natural habitat preservation is of uttermost importance, sure, but sometimes we are not fast enough, or the circumstances do not allow for proper in situ conservation. But if a species is lost, it is too late – forever,” he said. “This is where modern, scientifically led zoos can help, namely in building up modern arks for species conservation and developing assurance colonies to be prepared for restocking actions once the problem in nature is fixed.”

The Cologne Zoo program selected La Sierra University as an ark location for the tiger geckos due to its connection with Lee Grismer, a La Sierra biology professor and world-renowned authority in gecko research and conservation, Ziegler said. The two scientists have known each other since 2009, have jointly published scientific papers and are currently involved in a study on threatened reptiles from Myanmar. “We also both advocate for biodiversity research and conservation in Southeast Asia, we both have discovered and described a number of gecko species, among them also new species of tiger geckos,” Ziegler said.

The success of the La Sierra University gecko ark hinges on a team of La Sierra undergraduates, Alexandria Falvo and Jeren Gregory, led by 22-year-old La Sierra biology student Sarah Goymer from Paradise, Calif. whose intense interest in herpetology, love of nature, advocacy for conservation and academic acumen made her a perfect fit for the job, say her biology professors, herpetologists Lee Grismer and his son, Jesse Grismer. Goymer and her team will be tasked with the daily care of 50 beautifully marked tiger gecko offspring. The animals will arrive to La Sierra’s campus this spring from the zoo in Germany once required paperwork is completed and glass cages and other equipment is in place including controls for maintaining high humidity and temperatures between 72 -- 78 F.

The ark project’s ultimate goal is the successful raising of the threatened species into healthy adults who can then be released into their natural habitat in Vietnam.

In preparation for the geckos’ eventual arrival, Goymer spent Thanksgiving break at the Cologne Zoo under the guidance of Ziegler and his team. She learned how to feed adult and juvenile geckos, care for their eggs and provide appropriate habitat. She assisted in creating photo IDs for every gecko, and learned how to keep the fragile eggs, which look like miniature dinosaur eggs, safe from deadly condensation. In contrast, cages for adult geckos must be sprayed daily with water for moisture.

“The reason I was there was to learn about the conservation program they have and then more specifically how to take care of these geckos so we can bring them back and do the same thing here,” Goymer said.

“This is an opportunity that undergraduates are not going to get anywhere else.” -- Dr. Lee Grismer, Professor of Biology, La Sierra University

The Cologne Zoo’s conservation program involves around 100 threatened species of animals including large monitor lizards and crocodiles. Some have been returned to their natural habitats to bolster shrinking populations, including offspring of the critically endangered Philippine crocodile which were repatriated to the Philippines. “They're breeding some of the most threatened lizards in the world. They're the only place in the world that's doing it, and they're having really good success,” noted Lee Grismer.

An earlier attempt was made to launch the conservation ark partnership with a shipment of animals from Cologne Zoo to La Sierra, but the COVID-19 pandemic complicated plans and an animal caretaker was not available. The Grismers’ lab analyzes hundreds of specimens collected from expeditions that take place throughout Southeast and Central Asia, but the ongoing care of live animals is typically not a function of lab activities.

When Ziegler approached Lee again about four months ago to inquire about their participation in the conservation ark project, the necessary elements were close to being in place.

The Grismers had each had opportunities to observe Goymer over the past several years in their classes, in the lab, and in herpetological expeditions in the Santa Rosa Mountains and other local regions. While such plum jobs typically are awarded to graduate-level students, their impressions led to Goymer’s selection for the important role of caring for the geckos this year. “We had already field-tested her and seen this passion [for] nature,” said Jesse.

“We could just she tell she was hyper-fixed on nature,” which separated her from the large numbers of pre-health majors in biology classes at La Sierra who aim at careers in medicine, Jesse noted. “We said, ‘the only way we’re going to make this work is if we have someone who would put the animals first.’”

“This is an opportunity that undergraduates are not going to get anywhere else,” said Lee, “to be sent over to one of the leading conservation centers in the world.” The College of Arts & Sciences dean’s office covered all expenses for Goymer’s trip to Germany.

“If we want to turn the biodiversity crisis, we must invest in the young generation." -- Dr. Thomas Ziegler, Cologne Zoological Garden Aquarium Curator

Goymer is also fluent in German as an acquired second language which proved an asset during her zoo training experience. It was a fortuitous attribute her professors became aware of after selecting her for the role of caring for the animals.

“It was a really cool experience,” she said, describing the tiger geckos as “absolutely gorgeous” and “a little bitey, so you have to be careful. They like to latch on to you.”

Goymer was struck by the revolutionary uniqueness of the conservation program at Cologne, she said, and the significance of the conservationists’ work in the face of commercial interests. “It’s so important to have another conservation hotspot here, because not a lot of zoos truly have that as their focus,” she said.

For Ziegler, the furtherance of conservation is dependent on the involvement of younger generations. “If we want to turn the biodiversity crisis, we must invest in the young generation, to become more conservationists. Many of my former students are now working in positions not only in zoos, but in particular in conservation authorities, such as in the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation in Germany and commit themselves now for improved diversity conservation. I am sure that Sarah will go this way too and certainly will  become a passionate diversity researcher and conservationist.”

The Grismers are hoping that Goymer’s work with the Cologne Zoo and tiger geckos will launch the creation of a conservation emphasis in La Sierra’s biology program and later a full biology conservation major. They plan to take their herpetology class and Goymer on a field trip to the San Diego Zoo during winter quarter and introduce the Cologne Zoo conservation ark project toward piquing interest in a similar partnership.

“We are fortunate and flattered that the Cologne Zoo has enough confidence in us” to bring the ark project to La Sierra, Lee Grismer said. “The biology department at La Sierra University will now be professionally tied to the Cologne Zoo, which is just an amazing conservation place.”