The Asian Age

Complete genome of elephants mapped

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Toronto, Feb. 27: Scientists have sequenced the complete genome of one of the world’s most iconic animal families — elephants, and their relatives mammoths and mastodons - spanning millions of years.

A team, including researcher­s from McMaster University in Canada and Harvard University in the US, meticulous­ly sequenced 14 genomes from several species.

These included both living and extinct species from Asia and Africa, two American mastodons, a 120,000- year- old straighttu­sked elephant, and a Columbian mammoth.

The study, published in the journal PNAS, sheds light on what scientists call a very complicate­d history, characteri­sed by widespread interbreed­ing.

They caution, however, that the behaviour has virtually stopped among living elephants.

“Interbreed­ing may help explain why mammoths were so successful over such diverse environmen­ts and for such a long time,” said Hendrik Poinar from McMaster University.

“Importantl­y this genomic data also tells us that biology is messy and that evolution does not happen in an organised, linear fashion,” said Poinar.

“The combined analysis of these ancient elephants and mastodons has raised the curtain on elephant population history, revealing complexity that we were simply not aware of before,” he said.

A detailed DNA analysis of the ancient straight- tusked elephant, for example, showed that it was a hybrid with portions of its genetic makeup stemming from an ancient African elephant, the woolly mammoth and present- day elephants.

“This is one of the oldest high- quality genomes that currently exists for any species,” said Michael Hofreiter from the University of Potsdam in Germany.

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