Mail & Guardian

Blind golden mole rediscover­ed

The search for De Winton’s mole involved sniffer dog Jessie and collecting the mole’s DNA from the sand

- Sheree Bega

Using environmen­tal DNA (EDNA) techniques and the olfactory prowess of Jessie the border collie, scientists have rediscover­ed an enigmatic golden mole species that was presumed extinct “swimming” through the sand dunes of Port Nolloth.

The conservati­onists and geneticist­s from the Endangered Wildlife Trust (EWT) and the University of Pretoria have confirmed the existence of the De Winton’s golden mole, which was last seen in 1936.

Golden moles are a family of highly threatened small mammals with 10 of the 21 species listed as threatened on the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) Red List. De Winton’s, a blind iridescent mammal with “hearing superpower­s”, is classified as critically endangered and “possibly extinct”.

It was ranked 11th of the world’s most wanted lost species to be rediscover­ed since Re:wild, a group that protects and restores biodiversi­ty, launched its search for lost species campaign in 2017.

The search for De Winton’s was a “very exciting project with many challenges”, said Esther Matthew, senior field officer at the EWT. “Luckily, we had a fantastic team full of enthusiasm and innovative ideas, which is exactly what you need when you have to survey up to 18km of dune habitat in a day.”

They used a revolution­ary technique to detect the golden mole: EDNA, which is the DNA that animals shed as they move through the environmen­t, typically skin cells, hair and bodily excretions.

De Winton’s lives in inaccessib­le undergroun­d burrows and can detect vibrations from movement above ground. This helps the tiny mammals avoid being seen from the surface.

“It just so happens that for golden moles, the EDNA technique is very good because moles are in contact with the sand the whole time,” said Cobus Theron, senior conservati­on manager for EWT and a member of the search team.

“Their burrows are close to the surface of the dunes. When they crawl in that sand, they leave skin cells and we’re able to scoop that sand and then basically extract the DNA from that and identify the DNA.”

Like other species of golden moles, they move by gliding through the sand using their wide claws as paddles. As the sand collapses behind them, they don’t leave tunnels, making it difficult to find them.

Theron said there was some scepticism from the scientific community “about whether the De Winton’s golden mole even existed; whether the EDNA technique would be viable and whether dogs can actually do stuff like this”.

But he had “good faith” that the species had not yet gone extinct. “I was convinced it would just take the right detection method, the proper timing and a team passionate about finding it. Now not only have we solved the riddle, but we have tapped into this EDNA frontier where there is a huge amount of opportunit­y not only for moles, but for other lost or imperilled species.”

Aresearch paper documentin­g the team’s quest to find the elusive subterrane­an insectivor­e was published in November in the scientific journal Biodiversi­ty and Conservati­on.

It described how golden moles are “notoriousl­y obscure and understudi­ed”, mostly because of the difficulty associated with finding them, trapping them and observing their subterrane­an behaviour in the wild.

“Environmen­tal DNA techniques are efficient and relatively cheap and simple, non-destructiv­e and non-invasive and can be highly effective at detecting rare, cryptic, and elusive species, even at relatively low densities,” it stated.

Extracting DNA from soil is not without its hurdles, said Samantha Mynhardt, a conservati­on geneticist at the EWT and Stellenbos­ch University. “But we have been honing our skills and refining our techniques — even before this project — and we were fairly confident that if De Winton’s golden mole was in the environmen­t, we would be able to detect it by finding and sequencing its DNA.”

In June 2021, the researcher­s collected more than 100 soil samples from beaches and dunes on the northwest coast — including Port Nolloth beach, the only place where De Winton’s golden mole had ever been found.

After conducting a genetic analysis of each sample, the team determined that there were several species of golden mole living in the sand along the stretch of coast. Two more common species, the Cape golden mole and Grant’s golden mole, were found, as well as a third, Van Zyl’s golden mole, which is rare and endangered.

The team struck gold with the fourth species they found — De Winton’s golden mole — but it would take almost another year to definitive­ly prove it.

Because De Winton’s golden mole is geneticall­y similar to Van Zyl’s golden mole, the team needed more genetic informatio­n about De Winton’s to confidentl­y identify it using EDNA.

At the time, there was only one De Winton’s golden mole reference DNA sequence available. That sequence represents a nuclear gene that has limited variation between De Winton’s and Van Zyl’s, meaning the team couldn’t confidentl­y assign the fourth species to De Winton’s at that time.

Nearly a year later, the search team found the informatio­n they needed to solve the case when a second gene sequence for a De

Winton’s golden mole specimen — now housed at the Iziko South African Museum —became publicly available in January 2022.

It was a mitochondr­ial gene, from a much more variable part of the genome that has much higher levels of variation between De Winton’s and Van Zyl’s. When the team compared their EDNA sequences from Port Nolloth beach to the new reference sequence, it was a clear match to De Winton’s golden mole.

Theron said that terrestria­l EDNA is poorly developed in South Africa and the EWT, through Mynhardt, is at the “forefront of developing terrestria­l EDNA for use in elusive species”.

The team started their work by identifyin­g areas on the West Coast where it was possible the species was living undetected. They also interviewe­d local residents. A poster the team produced of the golden moles of the West Coast produced “huge interest and reports of sightings”, said Theron.

When they arrived on the beach in Port Nolloth there were fresh golden mole trails in the sand, but because it is difficult to identify a species of golden mole from its physical characteri­stics alone they also collected soil samples for EDNA analysis to accurately determine the species that left the trails.

A scent-detection border collie, Jessie, had been specially trained to sniff out golden moles, and led them to trails left behind by the moles.

“It was just really looking at a pilot [project] to see if the dogs could distinguis­h between the different golden mole species,” Theron said.

“Because we didn’t know what De Winton’s looked like, we trained Jessie on a very common species, Grant’s golden mole.”

If the team took Jessie to the mole trails and she did not fix on that trail, then it wasn’t Grant’s. “Then we knew it was either Van Zyl’s golden mole, which is also an endangered golden mole, or De Winton’s.”

Finding donors to support the work was difficult. Theron applied multiple times for funding unsuccessf­ully until Re:wild, through its lost species expedition project, provided the team with a small grant to do the work.

“It’s fantastic on multiple fronts because the techniques you had hoped would work, worked, and the species that you were looking for was found. The experience of the team is a phenomenal thing and the faith that the donor placed in you is fulfilled.”

Port Nolloth is a busy area and with developmen­t on the beach but “that area contains a very healthy population of golden moles,” he said.

Since the 2021 expedition, the EWT has identified four more De Winton’s golden mole population­s, and further research could unearth other population­s hidden in the West Coast’s dunes.

Work is now underway to protect the moles and their habitat from threats such as mining, agricultur­al expansion and residentia­l developmen­t.

“The opportunit­y is to get people to be proud of their environmen­t and to be conscious of the protection of coastal dune ecology,” Theron said. “De Winton’s golden mole is such a perfect flagship for that and it’s a beautiful little creature.”

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 ?? ?? Elusive: There are several species of golden mole, including the endangered Van Zyl’s mole, but the existence of De Winton’s (above) was in doubt until it was found on the West Coast beach at Port Nolloth (below).
Elusive: There are several species of golden mole, including the endangered Van Zyl’s mole, but the existence of De Winton’s (above) was in doubt until it was found on the West Coast beach at Port Nolloth (below).

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