Biologists successfully extract and analyze DNA from extinct lemurs
Yale biologists have managed to extract and analyze DNA from giant, extinct lemurs, according to a Yale study published in a recent issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Living lemurs comprise more than 50 species, all of which are unique to the island of Madagascar, which is the world's fourth largest island and located east of Africa.
Evolutionary analysis of the DNA obtained from the extinct giants reveals that they, like the living lemurs, are descended from a single primate ancestor that colonized Madagascar more than 60 million years ago, says the senior author, Anne Yoder, associate professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology.
Radiocarbon dating of the bones and teeth from which the DNA was obtained reveal that each of the giant lemurs analyzed died well over 1,000 years ago, according to Yoder.
The biologists extracted DNA from nine subfossil individuals in two of the more bizarre extinct species, Palaeopropithecus and Megaladapis. The first has been likened to tree sloths and the second to koala bears. Both ranged in body weight from 100 to 150 pounds, as compared to the largest living lemur, Indri indri, which weighs fewer than 15 pounds.
"The most important conclusion to be drawn from our study is that the phylogenetic placement of subfossil lemurs adds additional support to the hypothesis that non-human primates colonized Madagascar only once," Yoder says. "However, the limited taxonomic success of our study leaves open the possibility that data from additional taxa will overturn this increasingly robust hypothesis."
Yoder says the researchers' results support the close relationship of sloth lemurs (Palaeopropithecus) to living indriids, but Megaladapis does not show a sister-group relationship with the living genus Lepilemur. "The classification of the latter in the family Megaladapidae is misleading," she says.
Damaging effects of moisture, ultraviolet irradiation and tropical heat on DNA survival likely contributed to the inability to obtain DNA from some species, explains Yoder. The only samples to yield DNA from tropical localities were the two individuals that were used as positive controls, she notes.
"The results of our study contribute to the mountain of evidence that suggests that prospects for ancient DNA studies from the tropics are less promising than those from higher latitudes, but when the results are potentially of such compelling interest, it's always worth a try," she says.
-- By Jacqueline Weaver
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