Date: February 8, 2017
Source: Cardiff University
A new strategy of conservation
must be adopted if the black rhinoceros is to be saved from extinction,
concludes a study involving scientists from Cardiff University.
An international team of
researchers compared, for the first time, the genes of all living and extinct
black rhinoceros populations and found a massive decline in genetic diversity,
with 44 of 64 genetic lineages no longer existing. The new data suggest that
the future is bleak for the black rhinoceros unless the conservation of
genetically distinct populations is made a priority.
Professor Mike Bruford from
Cardiff University's School of Biosciences said: "Our findings reveal that
hunting and habitat loss has reduced the evolutionary potential of the black
rhinoceros dramatically over the last 200 years. The magnitude of this loss in
genetic diversity really did surprise us -- we did not expect it to be so
profound.
"The decline in the species'
genetic diversity threatens to compromise its potential to adapt in the future
as the climate and African landscape changes due to increased pressure from
man. The new genetic data we have collected will allow us to identify
populations of priority for conservation, giving us a better chance of
preventing the species from total extinction."
The research team used DNA
extracted from a combination of tissue and fecal samples from wild animals, and
skin from museum specimens. They sequenced DNA from maternal mitochondrial
genome and used classical DNA profiling to measure genetic diversity in past
and present populations and compared the profiles and sequences of animals in
different regions of Africa. Their next step is to sequence the black rhino
genome to see how the loss of genetic diversity is likely to affect populations
across all of its genes, vital information given the current poaching epidemic
and the fact that some populations are being targeted more than others.
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