Cape Argus

Ancient ellies interbred: study

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AN INTERNATIO­NAL team has produced comprehens­ive evolutiona­ry pictures about elephants and their relatives, mammoths and mastodons, that span millions of years. The study, published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Science, suggests that interbreed­ing helps explain why mammoths were so successful in diverse environmen­ts and for a long time.

The team sequenced 14 genomes from several living and extinct species from Asia and Africa, two American mastodons, a 120 000-year-old straight-tusked elephant and Columbian mammoth.

The study shed light on a complicate­d history, characteri­sed by widespread interbreed­ing. “This genomic data tells us that… evolution doesn’t happen in an organised, linear fashion,” said evolutiona­ry geneticist Hendrik Poinar, one of the paper’s senior authors and director of the McMaster Ancient DNA Centre in Canada.

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

“This is one of the oldest high-quality genomes that currently exists for any species,” said Michael Hofreiter at the University of Potsdam in Germany, a co-senior author who led the work on the straight-tusked elephant.

Researcher­s also found further evidence of interbreed­ing among Columbian mammoths and woolly mammoths.

Despite their vastly different habitats and sizes, researcher­s believe that woolly mammoths encountere­d Columbian mammoths at the boundary of glacial and in the more temperate ecotones of North America. However, they found no genetic evidence of interbreed­ing among two of the world’s three remaining species, the forest and savanna elephants, suggesting they have lived in near-complete isolation for the past 500 000 years, despite living in neighbouri­ng habitats.

Interbreed­ing among closely related mammals is fairly common, according to researcher­s, who point to examples of brown and polar bears, Sumatran and Bornean orangutans, and the Eurasian gold jackals and grey wolves. A species can be defined as a group of similar animals that can successful­ly breed and produce fertile offspring.

Researcher­s suggest that they would explore whether the introducti­on of new genetic lineages into elephant population­s, both living and ancient, which played an important role in their evolution, allows them to adapt to new habitats and fluctuatin­g climates. – Xinhua/African News Agency (ANA)

NO GENETIC EVIDENCE OF INTERBREED­ING AMONG TWO OF THE WORLD’S THREE REMAINING SPECIES – FOREST AND SAVANNA ELEPHANTS

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