The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Mammoth DNA found in Cambodia market items

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LONDON: Scientists tackling the illegal trade in elephant ivory got more than they bargained for when they found woolly mammoth DNA in trinkets on sale in Cambodia, they revealed Friday.

“It was a surprise for us to find trinkets made from woolly mammoth ivory in circulatio­n, especially so early into our testing and in a tropical country like Cambodia,” said Alex Ball, manager at the WildGenes laboratory, a wildlife conservati­on charity based at Edinburgh Zoo.

“It is very hard to say what the implicatio­ns of this finding are for existing elephant population­s, however we plan to continue our research and will use genetics to work out where it has come from.”

The giant mammals have been extinct for around 10,000 years and are not covered by internatio­nal agreements on endangered species.

WildGenes has been using genetic data to tackle wildlife crime by determinin­g the origin of ivory finding its way to the marketplac­e.

“It is estimated that globally over 30,000 elephants are killed every year for their ivory and it appears there are increasing amounts of ivory for sale within Cambodia,” said Ball.

“Understand­ing where the ivory is coming from is vital for enforcemen­t agencies looking to block illegal trade routes.”

Britain last year banned sales of all ivory except for the rarest and most important antiques. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows a hand-out picture released by the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS), received in London, showing a scientist drilling an ivory sample in the WildGenes laboratory based at Edinburgh Zoo in Scotland. — AFP photo
File photo shows a hand-out picture released by the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS), received in London, showing a scientist drilling an ivory sample in the WildGenes laboratory based at Edinburgh Zoo in Scotland. — AFP photo

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