DNA Study Reveals Secrets Of Gentically Similar Polar And Brown Bears

Posted: March 16, 2013 at 12:46 am

March 15, 2013

Brett Smith for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

A new report in PLoS Genetics attempts to clarify conflicting studies on a population of Alaskan brown bears that are genetically similar to polar bears, yet look and act like typical brown bears.

This population of brown bears stood out as being really weird genetically, and theres been a long controversy about their relationship to polar bears, said co-author Beth Shapiro, a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC). We can now explain it, and instead of the convoluted history some have proposed, its a very simple story.

Shapiro and her team believe that as the last Ice Age ended and the glaciers receded, a group of polar bears was stranded on Alaskas Admiralty, Baranof, and Chicagof Islands, collectively known as the ABC Islands. Eventually, male brown bears would swim across to the islands from the mainland and mate with female polar bears living there, transforming the entire ABC Islands population into brown bears.

Previous studies on both of these bear species, which have been known to mate and known to produce fertile hybrids, suggested that all polar bears had descended from the ABC brown bears essentially telling Shapiros story in reverse. However, the findings from UC Santa Cruz biologists show that the genetic exchange occurred only in isolated populations and did not affect the larger polar bear population.

Shapiro said previous research had focused primarily on the bears mitochondrial DNA, which is inherited directly from the mothers DNA.

The key to solving this mystery was to analyze DNA from the ABC Islands bears nuclear genomes, and in particular their X-chromosomes, Shapiro said in a statement. Focusing on the X gave us a surprising result.

In the latest study, the team, which included scientists from California, Canada and Russia, analyzed DNA from seven polar bears, an ABC Islands brown bear, a mainland brown bear, and a black bear. The researchers also considered data from recently published bear studies by other researchers.

The team found that polar bears are genetically homogeneous, with no evidence of brown bear ancestry, yet the ABC Islands brown bear DNA contained clear evidence of polar bear ancestry. According to Shapiro, evidence from the bears X chromosome indicated that ABC brown bears have more DNA in common with polar bear females than they do with polar bear males.

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DNA Study Reveals Secrets Of Gentically Similar Polar And Brown Bears

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