What Polar Bear Genomes May Reveal About Life in a Low-Ice Arctic – WIRED

Posted: June 26, 2022 at 10:11 pm

Shapiros Nature Ecology study also focused on what may have happened to other polar bear genomes during periods of low icein this case, around 120,000 or 125,000 years ago when, according to Shapiro, Arctic ice levels were similar to the present days. But here, she looked at the relationship between polar bears and brown bears.

Her team constructed a phylogenetic treesort of like an evolutionary map showing how the bears diverged from a common ancestor over timeusing Brunos genome and those of currently living polar bears, brown bears, and a black bear. (Shapiro was able to utilize one of Laidres Southeast Greenland polar bear genomes in her analyses, although the time gap between its life and Brunos is enormous. The sample pool, she says, is missing 100,000 years of evolution.)

From this and other analyses, the scientists gained some evidence that about 20,000 years before Bruno was born, brown bears and polar bears mixed to generate hybrid offspring. The scientists hypothesized that during this warm period, polar bears might have made their way on shore. The carcasses of the marine mammals they hunted could have attracted brown bearsleading to mating opportunities. As a potential result of this ancient interbreeding, Shapiro says, up to 10 percent of the genome of the modern brown bear comes from polar bear ancestry.

Figuring out how and when polar bears and brown bears commingled, further specialized, or diverged is a difficult task, given the limited fossil record and complexities of evolution. Evolution is a messy process, says Andrew Derocher, a polar bear researcher at the University of Alberta who was unaffiliated with the studies. He likens the process of evolutionary speciation to a massive bunch of vines that are creeping up the base of a tree, crisscrossing and entangling. Eventually, some of those vines might get their own trajectory, and thats what our species are, he says. But in this process, they can cross over, they can reconnect and fuse, and its certainly impossible to pull it apart, because theyre so interconnected.

Still, these two studies are linked, Laidre says, in the sense of: Where have polar bears persisted when sea ice was low, and how? The research may provide some insight into how bears in the pastand todays Southeast Greenland bearshave survived in warmer climates with less ice.

But how genetic changes manifest in physical form, and how those changes may have helped bears survive past warming events, are still open questions, the scientists say. And these study results shouldnt make us feel that the problem of Arctic warming is resolved, or that todays bears can easily adapt to rapidly shrinking levels of sea ice. It seems like global warming is happening too fast, Lindqvist says. She wonders if the polar bears can keep up.

After all, polar bears depend on seals as their food sourceand those seals depend on sea ice. Theres parts of the Arctic that used to be excellent seal habitats and excellent polar bear habitats, Derocher says. But theres no sea ice there anymore. And as a result, theres virtually no bears. Theres very few seals, and the ecosystem has basically unraveled.

What, then, might actually help? Global action on climate change, Laidre says. Thats it.

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What Polar Bear Genomes May Reveal About Life in a Low-Ice Arctic - WIRED

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