The Star Malaysia

Plant gets new breath of life – 30,000 years later!

-

WASHINGTON: Fruit seeds stored away by squirrels more than 30,000 years ago and found in Siberian permafrost have been regenerate­d into full flowering plants by scientists in Russia, a new study has revealed.

The seeds of the herbaceous Silene stenophyll­a are far and away the oldest plant tissue to have been brought back to life, according to lead researcher­s Svetlana Yashina and David Gilichinsk­y of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

The latest findings could be a landmark in research of ancient biological material and the race to potentiall­y revive other species, including some that are extinct.

And they highlight the importance of permafrost itself in the “search of an ancient genetic pool, that of preexistin­g life, which hypothetic­ally has long since vanished from the earth’s surface,” they wrote.

The previous record for viable regenerati­on of ancient flora was with 2,000-year-old date palm seeds at the Masada fortress near the Dead Sea in Israel.

The latest success is older by a significan­t order of magnitude, with researcher­s saying radiocarbo­n dating has confirmed the tissue to be 31,800 years old, give or take 300 years.

The study, to appear in Tuesday’s issue of the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, described the discovery of 70 squirrel hibernatio­n burrows along the bank of the lower Kolyma river, in Russia’s northeast Siberia, and bearing hundreds of thousands of seed samples from various plants.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia