China Daily

Elephant genome study offers surprises

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WASHINGTON — The most comprehens­ive elephant genome study ever conducted, covering seven living and extinct species, is offering some surprises about the family tree of the world’s largest land animal while also settling a debate about Africa’s elephants.

Researcher­s said on Monday that their research confirmed that the two types of African elephants, those inhabiting forests and those roaming savannas, are separate species that have lived in nearly complete isolation from one another for the past half million years despite their proximity.

They join the Asian elephant as the world’s three existing elephant species.

The scientists sequenced the genomes of two African savanna elephants, two African forest elephants, two Asian elephants, two extinct so-called straight-tusked elephants, four extinct woolly mammoths, including two from North America and two from Siberia, one extinct Columbian mammoth and two extinct American mastodons. Mastodons are not classified as members of the elephant lineage but are cousins.

“I hope that this study can create an appreciati­on for the rich evolutiona­ry history of elephants and emphasize the need for protecting the only three elephant species that still walk the planet today, who are all under imminent risk of extinction from poaching and habitat loss,” said Harvard Medical School geneticist Eleftheria Palkopoulo­u, one of the researcher­s.

The research found multiple instances of gene flow — interbreed­ing — between different extinct elephant species, though this has all but stopped among today’s elephants.

The straight-tusked elephants that once inhabited Europe and Asia — the largest of the species studied at up to 4 meters tall and 15 tons — are a case in point. The species turns out to be a hybrid with portions of its genome arising from an ancient African elephant, the woolly mammoth and the African forest elephants still alive today.

The scientists also found fresh evidence of interbreed­ing among the Ice Age Columbian and woolly mammoths, which crossed paths in locations where the more temperate regions of North America met the glaciers that then covered large parts of the continent.

The research was published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

 ?? BEN CURTIS / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A herd of adult and baby elephants walks in the dawn light with the highest mountain in Africa, Mount Kilimanjar­o, in the background, in Amboseli National Park, southern Kenya, in 2012.
BEN CURTIS / ASSOCIATED PRESS A herd of adult and baby elephants walks in the dawn light with the highest mountain in Africa, Mount Kilimanjar­o, in the background, in Amboseli National Park, southern Kenya, in 2012.

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