Realistic depiction of a frozen wolf pup with woolly rhinoceros in its stomach, scientists analyzing ancient DNA for extinction clues.
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Unique DNA analysis of extinct woolly rhinoceros in wolf stomach

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Researchers at the Swedish Centre for Palaeogenetics have analyzed DNA from an extinct woolly rhinoceros found in the stomach of a frozen wolf pup. The discovery, the first of its kind from the Ice Age, provides new clues about the species' extinction. The analysis suggests climate change likely caused the rhinoceros's disappearance rather than human hunting.

About 14,400 years ago, woolly rhinoceroses roamed Siberia, three meters long with thick fur, sturdy horns, and substantial fat deposits for protection against the cold. One such rhinoceros ended up in the stomach of a wolf pup in Yakutia, which soon after died in a landslide and froze into the permafrost, preserved until today.

Researchers at the Stockholm-based Centre for Palaeogenetics, led by Love Dalén, professor of evolutionary genetics at Stockholm University, have now mapped the rhinoceros's genome—a world first noted by CNN. "It is the first time ever that the genome of an animal—found inside another animal—from the Ice Age has been mapped," says Dalén.

The analysis was challenging as stomachs normally break down tissue, but the sample was barely digested. "We were very lucky because it had hardly started digesting at all," says Camilo Chacón-Duque, one of the researchers. They compared the DNA with samples from rhinoceroses that lived 18,000 and 49,000 years ago. The results show no signs of inbreeding, indicating a large population just before extinction around 14,000 years ago.

The rhinoceroses likely went extinct due to climate changes as the Ice Age ended and landscapes shifted. "They were well adapted to the cold and a certain type of landscape. When the landscapes changed, it could have put a lot of pressure on them," says Dalén. Human impact, such as hunting, seems unlikely as the main cause.

人々が言っていること

Reactions on X express amazement at the DNA analysis from a woolly rhinoceros found in a 14,400-year-old wolf pup's stomach by the Swedish Centre for Palaeogenetics. Posts highlight the species' genetic health near extinction, ruling out inbreeding, and reinforce climate change over human hunting as the cause. Scientists and enthusiasts share the study with positive, neutral tones focused on scientific implications.

関連記事

Scientists have reconstructed the genome of a woolly rhinoceros from a fragment of flesh found in the stomach of a wolf pup that died 14,400 years ago in Siberia. The analysis reveals the rhino was genetically healthy, with no signs of inbreeding, challenging theories about the causes of its extinction. This discovery provides the closest genetic insight yet into the species just before it vanished.

AIによるレポート

研究者らは、14,400年前のオオカミの子犬の胃内容物から毛鼻 rhino の完全なゲノムを解読し、絶滅前の種の最後の日々についての洞察を提供した。この発見は、消失の淵にあった遺伝的に健康な集団を明らかにする。この画期的な成果は、一匹の動物の消化残渣からこのようなゲノムが抽出された初めての例である。

化石骨の新たな分析によると、オーストラリアの絶滅した巨大カンガルーは、かつて跳躍しにくいほどかさばると考えられていたが、結局跳ねていたかもしれない。研究者らは、脚の構造に跳躍のストレスに耐えられる適応が見つかった。これらの発見は、これらの巨大有袋類の移動様式に関する長年の仮定に挑戦する。

AIによるレポート

新たな研究は、氷河期の巨大カンガルーが跳躍するには重すぎるという考えに異議を唱える。科学者らは、体重250キログラムに達するこれらの動物の脚の骨と腱が短い跳躍のバーストを支えられることを発見した。この能力は捕食者から逃れるのに役立った可能性が高い。

 

 

 

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