Poaching is altering the genetics of wild animals
Sometime in the distant past, well before humans walked the Earth, the ancestors of modern-day elephants evolved their iconic tusks. Elephants use their bleach-white incisors theyre technically giant teeth, like ours but longer to dig, collect food, and protect themselves.
Then Homo sapiens arrived, and elephant tusks became a liability. Poachers kill the massive animals for their tusks, which are worth about $330 a pound wholesale as of 2017. Hunters slaughter roughly 20,000 elephants a year to supply the global ivory trade, according to the World Wildlife Fund.
But just as tusks evolved because they provide a number of benefits, a striking new study shows that some populations of African elephants have rapidly evolved to become tuskless. Published in the journal Science, the papers authors found that many elephants in a park in Mozambique, which were heavily hunted for their ivory during a civil war a few decades ago, have lost their tusks presumably because tuskless elephants are more likely to survive and pass the trait on to their offspring.
https://www.vox.com/down-to-earth/22735163/elephant-tusks-genetics-evolution-adaptation-hunting
Goonch
(3,811 posts)bucolic_frolic
(46,995 posts)Tanuki
(15,314 posts)From the article:
..."Elephants need their tusks to dig, lift objects, and defend themselves. The hulking incisors are not useless appendages.
The genes that seem to make female elephants tuskless also appear to prevent mothers from giving birth to male calves thats why all the tuskless elephants in the park are female, Pringle said. (Some mothers did give birth to males with tusks, who likely didnt inherit the gene.) Over time, a shift in the sex of elephants could have consequences for population growth.".... (more )
cayugafalls
(5,755 posts)Without knowing what they were doing the poachers were putting themselves out of business. Once the gene pool is saturated with tuskless adults, the 'unconscious conspiracy' is complete.
Good on you, Darwin.
nuxvomica
(12,882 posts)Consider this from the article:
Studies of elephants rarely can say anything about the genetic basis of tusklessness, Hendry said. For years, researchers assumed that rapid evolution was common only in small species with short life cycles. Given these results, Nobody can argue that evolution isnt occurring, even in the biggest and longest-lived species, he added.
Elephants are very social, can communicate over great distances, and they have funerals for their dead. I think they are wicked smart and wonder if they may be consciously selecting mates for tuskless lineage.
sinkingfeeling
(52,993 posts)the old bulls with amazingly long tusks that almost touch the ground.