Date: November 30, 2018
Source: University of Helsinki
Almost ninety
years ago on a freezing January morning, the keepers of the Stockholm Zoo in
Sweden discovered a dead seal pup in their seal pond. The pup was immediately
recognized as a bastard; a hybrid between species that should not interbreed.
Only two grey seal males and one ringed seal female, species belonging to
different mammalian genera, were housed in the pond. The hybrid appeared to
carry a mixture of features of both the parent species.
The
researchers in the University of Helsinki and their international colleagues
have located the preserved hybrid in the museum collections, and confirmed
genetically that the skull specimen is the hybrid between the grey and ringed
seal.
They also
examined new genomic data from wild Baltic Sea grey and ringed seals. By comparing
these genomic sequences with that of the Saimaa ringed seal, it was possible to
examine whether the grey and the ringed seals could have interbred also in the
wild.
Just like
has been found to be the case between many mammalian species, including early
humans, the analyses revealed genetic traces of hybridization between the seal
species in the Baltic.
"The
shape of the skull, and especially the teeth of grey and ringed seals are so
different that they could be classified as belonging to different families if
discovered as fossils. Yet, the seal hybrid was found to be an almost perfect
intermediate between the species with no detectable anomalies. When placed into
the context of other hybridizing mammals, the grey and ringed seals provide the
extreme bracket of shape difference found between hybridizing species
pairs," Academy Professor Jukka Jernvall from the Institute of
Biotechnology, University of Helsinki, Finland says.
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