Date: December 10, 2018
Source: Queensland University of Technology
A
Queensland University of Technology (QUT) led collaboration with University of
Adelaide reveals that Australia's pint-sized banded hare-wallaby is the closest
living relative of the giant short-faced kangaroos which roamed the continent
for millions of years, but died out about 40,000 years ago.
Published
in Systematic Biology, the research involved the first near-complete
mitochondrial (mt) genome sequencing from extinct Australian megafauna.
DNA was
sequenced from inner ear bones (petrous bones) of a 45,000-year-old giant
short-faced kangaroo, Simosthenurus occidentalis, part of the Sthenurinae
sub-family, found at Mt Cripps in Tasmania
These are
the longest DNA sequences ever recovered from Australia's extinct megafauna,
with more than 16,000 base pairs of mtDNA, which is used to help understand
evolutionary relationships
The
results support an evolutionary link between giant short-faced kangaroos
(Sthenurinae) and the threatened banded hare-wallaby, Lagostrophus
fasciatus
The study
also combined the DNA evidence with fossil and anatomical data to trace body
size change over the evolutionary history of kangaroos and wallabies
The
analysis was conducted by QUT evolutionary biologists PhD researcher Manuela
Cascini and Associate Professor Matthew Phillips, from the Science and
Engineering Faculty, in collaboration with University of Adelaide's Professor
Alan Cooper and Dr Kieren Mitchell, who undertook the DNA sequencing at the
Australian Centre for Ancient DNA.
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