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Tracing Cat Evolution with DNA



 
 
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  #1  
Old January 6th 06, 08:12 PM posted to rec.pets.cats.health+behav
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Default Tracing Cat Evolution with DNA

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/06/science/06cats.html
(see pic of cute kitten accompanying the story)

January 6, 2006
DNA Offers New Insight Concerning Cat Evolution
By NICHOLAS WADE

Researchers have gained a major insight into the evolution of cats by
showing how they migrated to new continents and developed new species as sea
levels rose and fell.

About nine million years ago - two million years after the cat family first
appeared in Asia - these successful predators invaded North America by
crossing the Beringian land bridge connecting Siberia and Alaska, a team of
geneticists writes in the journal Science today.

Later, several American cat lineages returned to Asia. With each migration,
evolutionary forces morphed the pantherlike patriarch of all cats into a
rainbow of species, from ocelots and lynxes to leopards, lions and the
lineage that led to the most successful cat of all, even though it has
mostly forsaken its predatory heritage: the cat that has induced people to
pay for its board and lodging in return for frugal displays of affection.

This new history of the family, known as Felidae, is based on DNA analyses
of the 37 living species performed by Warren E. Johnson and Stephen J.
O'Brien of the National Cancer Institute and colleagues elsewhere.

Before DNA, taxonomists had considerable difficulty in classifying the cat
family. The fossil record was sparse and many of the skulls lacked
distinctiveness. One scheme divided the family into Big Cats and Little
Cats. Then, in 1997, Dr. Johnson and Dr. O'Brien said they thought most
living cats fell into one of eight lineages, based on the genetic element
known as mitochondrial DNA.

Having made further DNA analyses, the researchers have drawn a full family
tree that assigns every cat species to one of the lineages. They have also
integrated their tree, which is based solely on changes in DNA, with the
fossil record. The fossils, which are securely dated, allow dates to be
assigned to each fork in the genetic family tree.

Knowing when each species came into existence, the Johnson-O'Brien team has
been able to reconstruct a series of at least 10 intercontinental migrations
by which cats colonized the world. The cheetah, for instance, now found in
Africa, belongs to a lineage that originated in North America and some three
million years ago migrated back across the Bering land bridge to Asia and
then Africa.

Dr. O'Brien said the cats were very successful predators, second only to
humans, and quickly explored new territories as opportunity arose. Sea
levels were low from 11 million to 6 million years ago, enabling the first
modern cats, in paleontologists' perspective (saber-tooth tigers are ancient
cats), to spread from Asia west into Africa, creating the caracal lineage,
and east into North America, generating the ocelot, lynx and puma lineages.

The leopard lineage appeared around 6.5 million years ago in Asia. The
youngest of the eight lineages, which led eventually to the domestic cat,
emerged some 6.2 million years ago in Asia and Africa, either from ancestors
that had never left Asia or more probably from North American cats that had
trekked back across the Bering land bridge.

Sea levels then rose, confining each cat species to its own continent, but
sank again some three million years ago, allowing a second round of cat
migrations. It was at this time that the ancestors of the cheetah and the
Eurasian lynxes colonized the Old World from the New.

Chris Wozencraft, an authority on the classification of carnivorous mammals,
said the new cat family tree generally agreed with one that he had just
published in Mammal Species of the World, a standard reference. Dr.
Wozencraft, a taxonomist at Bethel College in Indiana, based his
classification on fossil and zoological information, as well as on DNA data
already published by Dr. O'Brien's laboratory.

Cat fossils are very hard to tell apart, because they differ mostly just in
size, and the DNA data emerging over the last decade has helped bring the
field from confusion to consensus, Dr. Wozencraft said.

Despite their evolutionary success, most of the large cats are in peril
because their broad hunting ranges have brought them into collision with
people. "With the exception of the house cat and a few other small cat
species, nearly every one of the 37 species is considered endangered or
threatened," Dr. Johnson and Dr. O'Brien write in the current Annual Review
of Genomics and Human Genetics.

Fewer than 15,000 tigers, cheetahs and snow leopards remain in the wild,
they estimate, and pumas and jaguar populations have been reduced to about
50,000 each.

Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company




  #2  
Old January 6th 06, 11:14 PM posted to rec.pets.cats.health+behav
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Tracing Cat Evolution with DNA

Thanks- This is very interesting.
Alison

--
Alison
http://catinfolinks.mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk/
http://doginfolinks.mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk/

"Dick Peavey" wrote in message
...
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/06/science/06cats.html
(see pic of cute kitten accompanying the story)

January 6, 2006
DNA Offers New Insight Concerning Cat Evolution
By NICHOLAS WADE

Researchers have gained a major insight into the evolution of cats

by
showing how they migrated to new continents and developed new

species as sea
levels rose and fell.

About nine million years ago - two million years after the cat

family first
appeared in Asia - these successful predators invaded North America

by
crossing the Beringian land bridge connecting Siberia and Alaska, a

team of
geneticists writes in the journal Science today.

Later, several American cat lineages returned to Asia. With each

migration,
evolutionary forces morphed the pantherlike patriarch of all cats

into a
rainbow of species, from ocelots and lynxes to leopards, lions and

the
lineage that led to the most successful cat of all, even though it

has
mostly forsaken its predatory heritage: the cat that has induced

people to
pay for its board and lodging in return for frugal displays of

affection.

This new history of the family, known as Felidae, is based on DNA

analyses
of the 37 living species performed by Warren E. Johnson and Stephen

J.
O'Brien of the National Cancer Institute and colleagues elsewhere.

Before DNA, taxonomists had considerable difficulty in classifying

the cat
family. The fossil record was sparse and many of the skulls lacked
distinctiveness. One scheme divided the family into Big Cats and

Little
Cats. Then, in 1997, Dr. Johnson and Dr. O'Brien said they thought

most
living cats fell into one of eight lineages, based on the genetic

element
known as mitochondrial DNA.

Having made further DNA analyses, the researchers have drawn a full

family
tree that assigns every cat species to one of the lineages. They

have also
integrated their tree, which is based solely on changes in DNA, with

the
fossil record. The fossils, which are securely dated, allow dates to

be
assigned to each fork in the genetic family tree.

Knowing when each species came into existence, the Johnson-O'Brien

team has
been able to reconstruct a series of at least 10 intercontinental

migrations
by which cats colonized the world. The cheetah, for instance, now

found in
Africa, belongs to a lineage that originated in North America and

some three
million years ago migrated back across the Bering land bridge to

Asia and
then Africa.

Dr. O'Brien said the cats were very successful predators, second

only to
humans, and quickly explored new territories as opportunity arose.

Sea
levels were low from 11 million to 6 million years ago, enabling the

first
modern cats, in paleontologists' perspective (saber-tooth tigers are

ancient
cats), to spread from Asia west into Africa, creating the caracal

lineage,
and east into North America, generating the ocelot, lynx and puma

lineages.

The leopard lineage appeared around 6.5 million years ago in Asia.

The
youngest of the eight lineages, which led eventually to the domestic

cat,
emerged some 6.2 million years ago in Asia and Africa, either from

ancestors
that had never left Asia or more probably from North American cats

that had
trekked back across the Bering land bridge.

Sea levels then rose, confining each cat species to its own

continent, but
sank again some three million years ago, allowing a second round of

cat
migrations. It was at this time that the ancestors of the cheetah

and the
Eurasian lynxes colonized the Old World from the New.

Chris Wozencraft, an authority on the classification of carnivorous

mammals,
said the new cat family tree generally agreed with one that he had

just
published in Mammal Species of the World, a standard reference. Dr.
Wozencraft, a taxonomist at Bethel College in Indiana, based his
classification on fossil and zoological information, as well as on

DNA data
already published by Dr. O'Brien's laboratory.

Cat fossils are very hard to tell apart, because they differ mostly

just in
size, and the DNA data emerging over the last decade has helped

bring the
field from confusion to consensus, Dr. Wozencraft said.

Despite their evolutionary success, most of the large cats are in

peril
because their broad hunting ranges have brought them into collision

with
people. "With the exception of the house cat and a few other small

cat
species, nearly every one of the 37 species is considered endangered

or
threatened," Dr. Johnson and Dr. O'Brien write in the current Annual

Review
of Genomics and Human Genetics.

Fewer than 15,000 tigers, cheetahs and snow leopards remain in the

wild,
they estimate, and pumas and jaguar populations have been reduced to

about
50,000 each.

Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company






 




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