Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

No place to hide for ‘Nessie’

Loch Ness water to be tested for DNA sampling

- NICK PERRY

THE stories seem as tall as the lake is deep. For hundreds of years, visitors to Scotland’s Loch Ness have described seeing a monster that some believe lurks in the depths.

But now the legend of “Nessie” may have no place left to hide. A New Zealand scientist is leading an internatio­nal team to the lake next month, where they will take samples of the murky waters and conduct DNA tests to determine what species live there.

University of Otago Professor Neil Gemmell said he’s no believer in Nessie, but he wants to take people on an adventure and communicat­e some science along the way. Besides, he said, his kids think it’s one of the coolest things he’s ever done.

One of the more far-fetched theories is that Nessie is a longnecked plesiosaur that somehow survived the period when dinosaurs became extinct. Another theory is that the monster is actually a sturgeon or giant catfish.

Many believe the sightings are hoaxes or can be explained by floating logs or strong winds.

Gemmell said that when creatures move about in water, they leave behind tiny frag- ments of DNA. It comes from their skin, feathers, scales and urine.

He said his team will take 300 samples of water from different points around the lake and at different depths. They will filter the organic material and extract the DNA, he said, sequencing it by using technology originally created for the human genome project.

He said the DNA results will then be compared against a database of known species.

“I’m going into this thinking it’s unlikely there is a monster, but I want to test that hypothesis,” Gemmell said. “What we’ll get is a really nice survey of the biodiversi­ty of the Loch Ness.”

Gemmell, 51, said he first visited Loch Ness in his late 20s while on holiday. Like thousands of tourists before him, he gazed out over the lake trying to catch sight of a monster.

Graeme Matheson, chief of the Scottish Society of New Zealand, said he, too, has visited Loch Ness and gazed out over the water, and that he wished Gemmell all the best.

“I hope he and his cohorts find something, although I think they’ll be battling,” Matheson said. “Still, it’s a good way to get a trip to Scotland.”

Gemmell said that even if they don’t find any monster DNA, it won’t deter some Nessie believers. He said they’ve already been offering him theories, like that Nessie might be on holiday after swimming to the sea via hidden underwater caves, or that the creature might be extraterre­strial and not leave behind any DNA.

“In our lives we want there still to be mysteries, some of which we will ultimately solve,” Gemmell said. “That’s part of the spirit of discovery. And sometimes, what you find may not be what you were expecting.” – AP/African News Agency (ANA)

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? Scotland’s Loch Ness, reported home of the elusive monster, Nessie.
PICTURE: AP Scotland’s Loch Ness, reported home of the elusive monster, Nessie.
 ??  ?? A shadowy shape that some people say is a photo of the Loch Ness monster.
A shadowy shape that some people say is a photo of the Loch Ness monster.

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