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JHan

(10,173 posts)
Sun Nov 11, 2018, 01:28 PM Nov 2018

Under poaching pressure, elephants are evolving to lose their tusks

Elephants with a rare “tuskless” genetic trait had a better chance of surviving Mozambique’s long civil war, financed in part by poached ivory. About a third of surviving elephants’ daughters have no tusks.

Decades ago, some 4,000 elephants lived in Gorongosa, says Joyce Poole—an elephant behavior expert and National Geographic Explorer who studies the park’s pachyderms. But those numbers dwindled to triple digits following the civil war. New, as yet unpublished, research she’s compiled indicates that of the 200 known adult females, 51 percent of those that survived the war—animals 25 years or older—are tuskless. And 32 percent of the female elephants born since the war are tuskless.

A male elephant’s tusks are bigger and heavier than those of a female of the same age, says Poole, who serves as scientific director of a nonprofit called ElephantVoices. “But once there’s been heavy poaching pressure on a population, then the poachers start to focus on the older females as well,” she explains. “Over time, with the older age population, you start to get this really higher proportion of tuskless females.”

This tuskless trend isn’t limited to Mozambique, either. Other countries with a history of substantial ivory poaching also see similar shifts among female survivors and their daughters. In South Africa, the effect has been particularly extreme—fully 98 percent of the 174 females in Addo Elephant National Park were reportedly tuskless in the early 2000s.


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Under poaching pressure, elephants are evolving to lose their tusks (Original Post) JHan Nov 2018 OP
That seems very fast for a genetic evolution... Moostache Nov 2018 #1
yup ++ that's what struck me as well, JHan Nov 2018 #2
If the hunting of elephant for ivory was recent I would probably agree however they have been hunted cstanleytech Nov 2018 #3
If most of the tusked females were killed for their tusks, they will no longer reproduce. hedda_foil Nov 2018 #4
Mother Nature is Bitchen nt Xipe Totec Nov 2018 #5

Moostache

(9,897 posts)
1. That seems very fast for a genetic evolution...
Sun Nov 11, 2018, 01:32 PM
Nov 2018

I would like to see the research and data on this trend, but if it holds up that would make evolution far more capable than many assume and would make changing environmental inputs (like climate change) sure to produce some amazing things in the next few decades.

JHan

(10,173 posts)
2. yup ++ that's what struck me as well,
Sun Nov 11, 2018, 01:33 PM
Nov 2018

that's a very quick suppression of a trait in response to increased poaching pressure. Breath taking actually.

cstanleytech

(26,310 posts)
3. If the hunting of elephant for ivory was recent I would probably agree however they have been hunted
Sun Nov 11, 2018, 01:47 PM
Nov 2018

for hundreds of years already so really its been an ongoing process.

hedda_foil

(16,375 posts)
4. If most of the tusked females were killed for their tusks, they will no longer reproduce.
Sun Nov 11, 2018, 02:29 PM
Nov 2018

If mostly tuskless females survive, they're more likely to produce tuskless female babies. I wonder if this reproductive pressure will also lead to tuskless or small-tusked males.

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