JUNE 6, 2019
New studies
by two research teams published today in the journals Nature Ecology and
Evolution and Current Biology challenge decades of accepted scientific
opinion concerning the evolutionary relationships of tree sloths and their
extinct kin. The research teams used different molecular tools—the protein
collagen in one case and the mitochondrial genome in the other—but they reached
nearly the same results. The concurrent findings are significant because they
provide molecular evidence that appears to overturn a longstanding consensus,
based on the study of anatomical features, regarding how the major groups of
sloths are related to one another.
Corresponding
authors Ross D. E. MacPhee of the American Museum of Natural History and
Frédéric Delsuc of the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) at
the University of Montpellier noted that, although their research groups worked
separately, they were in communication.
"All of
us were initially surprised by our results because they thoroughly contradicted
what seemed to be the accepted view based on anatomy," said Delsuc.
"Exceptional
results demand exceptional verification," continued MacPhee, a curator in
the Museum's Department of Mammalogy, "That's why we arranged with the
journals to publish our papers simultaneously, to emphasize that corroboration
is a crucial part of good science."
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