Modern elephant species genetically distinct, though ancient ancestors interbred
TORONTO — For many people, one elephant may seem much like another — majestic trunked and tusked creatures that roam the African savannah and forests or often serve as domesticated beasts of burden in India and parts of southeast Asia.
But an international study shows the three modern species of elephants have distinct genetic profiles, despite a complex evolutionary history spanning millions of years that includes interbreeding between some groups of their ancient forebears, including mammoths and mastodons.
The team of scientists meticulously sequenced 14 genomes from both living and extinct elephant species from Asia and Africa, two American mastodons, a 120,000-year-old straight-tusked elephant and a Columbian mammoth.
“We provided extracts in genomes of several woolly mammoths from across Siberia and North America and then the Columbian mammoth, which were the larger (animals) living south of the ice sheets, in southern Canada through the United States down into Mexico,” said evolutionary geneticist Hendrik Poinar, director of McMaster’s Ancient DNA Centre and a senior author on the research.


