African elephants are two distinct species |
"They split about the same time as African and Asian elephants split into separate species, and much longer ago than people previously thought," says David Reich, a population geneticist at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts, and a lead author on the study. "You can no more call African elephants the same species as you can Asian elephants and the mammoth," he adds. Most researchers agree that the Asian elephant and the mammoth are separate species, says Thomas Gilbert, a geneticist at the University of Copenhagen. "But this study really hammers the coffin shut on any arguments that the forest and savannah are anything but different species, or even genera," he says. Mitochondrial DNA can only give researchers information on maternal ancestry, as this genetic material is inherited solely from the mother. Examining the nuclear genome, which is around 200,000 times larger than that contained in mitochondria, gives a broader and more accurate picture of elephants' history. "You get a different picture by looking at nuclear DNA", says Reich.
Mitochondrial DNA evidence suggesting that forest and savanna elephants interbred recently and had a recent shared female ancestor can be explained as a result of the female elephant's social behaviour, the researchers say. Females tend to stay close to their place of birth, while the males roam. Herds of female forest elephants could have repeatedly come into contact and bred with migrating male savanna elephants. Over a long period of time, the forest elephant gene pool would become diluted and displaced by that of the savanna elephants, but the forest DNA would be conserved in the mitochondrial DNA, which is passed on through the female line. "What we see is an ancient split with a bit of gene flow more recently," he says. Hybridization happens between closely related animals and does not necessarily imply that the two are the same species, he says. The authors suggest that the findings will help to reprioritize elephant conservation programmes. All African elephants are currently conserved as the same species. But the evidence that they are two distinct species suggests that they may be facing different pressures and require different conservation strategies. The forest elephants should become a greater conservation priority, the study says.
Nature
January 11, 2011
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