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The
research highlights the need for conservation of
the animals |
DNA
tests on an endangered variety of Indian wolf suggest
it might be the most ancient representative of
the animals anywhere in the world.
Analysis
of genetic material from one of the wolves shows that
its lineage stems back around 800,000 years.
Currently,
these Himalayan wolves are regarded as belonging to
the species Canis lupus , with other grey
wolves.
But
scientists think they may be genetically different
enough from other groups to comprise a separate species.
Scientists
at the Wildlife Institute of India (WII), in Dehradun,
analysed DNA from one such wolf housed in a nature
park in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh.
By
analysing DNA from the cell's "power units" called
mitochondria, the scientists were able to put
a time to the point at which the wolf lineage originated.
This
was possible because mitochondrial DNA changes regularly
over time, allowing the emergence of patterns in its
sequence to be clocked.
"Until
this finding the peninsular wolf [found in the Indian
plains] was the oldest in the world at 400,000 years.
North American and Eurasian wolves are only 150,000
years old," AK Gulati, Himachal Pradesh wildlife chief
told the BBC.
The
results of this study highlight the need for conservation
of Indian wolf populations.
The
research highlights the need for conservation of the
animals.
The
researchers compared over 700 DNA sequences of wolves
and dogs from the world over with Indian wolves and
dogs.
Other
tests on wolves from surrounding areas show that they
all belong to a very ancient and genetically divergent
Himalayan lineage.
The
mitochondrial clock, which is based on the rate of
changes observed in the DNA sequences, dates this lineage
to about 800,000 years.
Julie,
the female wolf whose DNA was analysed, was found 14
years ago in the high and dry Spiti valley bordering
Tibet.
"We
are approaching the WII to further study the species
and prepare a project to ascertain the status of the
Himalayan wolf so that a conservation breeding plan
could be started," Mr Gulati said.
Hunting
and loss of habitat have sharply reduced the Himalayan
wolf population. According to one estimate, they could
be barely 350 left in the entire western Himalayan
region.
Wildlife
authorities have recently spotted 33 Himalayan wolves
in the Spiti valley. But Julie is the only one is in
captivity.
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