The Scotsman

Climate change may have killed woolly rhinoceros, not humans

● Extinct for 14,000 years, the ice age giant was a victim of the weather

- By NILIMA MARSHALL newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Climate change rather than overhuntin­g may have caused the woolly rhinoceros to become extinct around 14,000 years ago, scientists have said.

The giant herbivorou­s creatures are thought to have roamed northern Asia and Europe during the ice ages around 350,000 years ago. Genetic analysis suggests they were well adapted to living in colder climates.

While the arrival of humans has been proposed as a potential cause of extinction, evidence on this is limited.

So a team of researcher­s analysed ancient DNA from 14 woolly rhinos (coelodonta antiquitat­is) gathered from tissue, bone, and hair samples.

The findings, published in the journal Current Biology, showed the megaherbiv­ores’ population­s remained “stable and diverse” for more than 13,000 years following the arrival of humans.

Senior study author Love Dalen, a professor of evolutiona­ry genetics at the Centre for Palaeogene­tics, a joint venture between Stockholm University and the Swedish Museum of Natural History, said: “It was initially thought that humans appeared in north-eastern Siberia 14,000 or 15,000 years ago, around when the woolly rhinoceros went extinct.

“But recently there have been several discoverie­s of much older human occupation sites, the most famous of which is around 30,000 years old.

“So, the decline towards extinction of the woolly rhinoceros doesn’t coincide so much with the first appearance of humans in the region.

“If anything, we actually see something looking a bit like an increase in population size during this period.”

The researcher­s looked at the genome, or genetic material, of the creatures to get a picture of whether there was increased in-breeding or reduced genetic diversity – key indicators of ancient population declines among mammals.

Co-first author Nicolas Dussex, a post-doctoral researcher at the Centre for Palaeogene­tics, said: “We examined changes in population size and estimated in-breeding.

“We found that, after an increase in population size at the start of a cold period some 29,000 years ago, the woolly rhino population size remained constant and that, at this time, in-breeding was low.” The researcher­s said this stability “lasted until well after humans began living in Siberia,

contrastin­g the declines that would be expected if the woolly rhinos went extinct due to hunting”. Co-first author Edana Lord, a PHD student at the Centre for Palaeogene­tics, said: “The data we looked at only goes up to 18,500 years ago, which is about 4,500 years before their extinction, so it implies that they declined sometime in that gap.”

As part of their DNA analysis, the researcher­s also found genetic mutations that helped the woolly rhinos adapt to colder weather.

Based on their findings, the scientists believe this species may have declined due to the warming period towards the end of the last ice age.

 ??  ?? 0 Extinct woolly rhinoceros reconstruc­ted from the mummified remains of a seven-month old female found in 2015 by a hunter in Siberia
0 Extinct woolly rhinoceros reconstruc­ted from the mummified remains of a seven-month old female found in 2015 by a hunter in Siberia

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