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Ivory poaching and the rapid evolution of tusklessness in African elephants

Shane C. Campbell‐Staton, Brian J. Arnold, Dominique Gonçalves, Petter Granli, Joyce H. Poole, Ryan A. Long, Robert M. Pringle

2021Science115 citationsDOI

Abstract

Lose the tusks Harvest and poaching of wildlife have increased as the human population and our technology have grown. These pressures now occur on such a scale that they can be considered selective drivers. Campbell-Staton et al . show that this phenomenon has occurred in African elephants, which are poached for their ivory, during the 20-year Mozambican civil war (see the Perspective by Darimont and Pelletier). In response to heavy poaching by armed forces, African elephant populations in Gorongosa National Park declined by 90%. As the population recovered after the war, a relatively large proportion of females were born tuskless. Further exploration revealed this trait to be sex linked and related to specific genes that generated a tuskless phenotype more likely to survive in the face of poaching. —SNV

Topics & Concepts

PoachingBiologyPopulationWildlifeEvolutionary biologyZoologyEcologySociologyDemographydental development and anomaliesWildlife Ecology and ConservationAnimal Genetics and Reproduction
Ivory poaching and the rapid evolution of tusklessness in African elephants | Litcius