Date: November 16, 2018
Source: Bielefeld University
Their fur
was used as a raw material for coats; their fat was used for oil lamps and
cosmetics: right up to the end of the nineteenth century, millions of seals
were being hunted and killed every year worldwide. The consequences of this
episode of commercial hunting for today's seal populations is the subject of a
study published today (16.11.2018) in Nature Communications. Population
geneticists at Bielefeld University and the British Antarctic Survey have found
that eleven seal species only narrowly escaped extinction. The scientists
managed to include nearly all of the species alive today in their research. The
study nevertheless reveals that most species survived the heyday of seal
hunting in sufficient numbers to retain most of their genetic diversity.
'Hunting,
epidemics, and climate change all have the potential to reduce the number of
individuals in a population to the point where genetic diversity is lost,' says
Professor Dr Joseph Hoffman, head of the Molecular Behavioural Ecology research
group at Bielefeld University and sub-project manager in the Transregio
Collaborative Research Centre NC³ that is studying animals and their individual
niches. 'These extreme population reductions are known as bottlenecks and can
affect a species' potential to survive'.
'When a
species lacks genetic diversity, it has a lower chance of adapting to changing
environmental conditions or protecting itself against parasites or pathogens.
You can compare the gene pool with a toolbox: the fewer tools you have, the
less well-equipped you are for different situations,' says Hoffman.
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