December 31, 2019 by Nancy Youm, Gentside
Crocodiles are evolving into a
new species right in front of our eyes. These huge orange beasts that live in
the caves of Gabon have developed DNA that is different from that of their
surface-dwelling peers.
The Abanda cave is not a place
you want to live unless you enjoy total obscurity, high temperatures,
foul-smelling vapours and soil that is covered with a thick layer of guano (bat
faeces). An environment that speleologists had to explore to uncover a
treasure: a new
species of crocodiles, hard proof of nature's adaptability.
An inhospitable environment
"It looks like liquid
mud," scientist Olivier Testa told National Geographic of the substance
that covers the surface of the cave, "... but it's not mud." This
pasty substance is guano. Tons and tons of guano mixed with the cave's water,
forming a pool of bats faeces.
"It's a particularly
demanding environment," says herpetologist Matthew Shirley. But the
crocodiles that live there - a bright orange species that is almost blind and
resembles the Osteolaemus tetraspis, their surface-dwelling cousins -
don't seem to mind. According to the scientists, these crocodiles get their
colour from guano, which they bathe in throughout their underground life.
"Bat guano is largely
comprised of urea," says Shirley. "When they're sitting in this bat
guano slushie, we think the highly basic pH water is tanning their skin."
The cave crocodiles' diet is also different from other species': in the cave,
they mainly feed on bats, whereas other crocodiles eat fish and shellfish.
Two different species?
But there's an even more striking
difference between these two types of crocodiles that were originally the same
species. According to Shirley, the cave population has developed its own
genetic signature, which is different from that of Osteolaemus tetraspis.
To confirm this hypothesis, the team collected blood samples from about 40
underground crocodiles and 200 from those living in broad daylight.
The results of the genetic
analysis revealed that orange crocodiles were endowed with a unique haplotype,
a group of genes that are close to each other on the same chromosome and are
passed down together. These genetically linked alleles suggest that cave
crocodiles are progressively
becoming genetically distinct from surface-dwelling
crocodiles.
The team's article is still under
review. "As a result of that isolation and the fact that few individuals
come in or go out, they're in the process of [becoming] a new species,"
says Shirley."Whether that happens soon or not is anyone's guess." It
remains to be seen how these animals reproduce.
Too big to get out
The smaller crocodiles can easily
venture outside of the caves. But it looks like the larger ones are actually
unable to get out. So, they have two options: they can either stop reproducing
altogether or nest inside the caves - a case that, so far, has never been
documented. Crocodiles generally need vegetation for their eggs, a resource
that is unavailable in the depths of the underground habitat.
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