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Genetic testing proved the shark hybridization |
The
discovery of a hybrid species of shark has led excited marine scientists to
speculate that the animals are responding to climate change. They say nature
may be selecting for sharks that extend their range.
Crossbreeding
has been observed for the first time among sharks in a development that
scientists are calling "evolution in action."
Australian
researchers say the hybrid offspring of a tropical shark and its cousin found
in cooler waters will inherit a greater range than its parents.
A total of
57 offspring of common blacktip and Australian blacktip sharks were found in
waters off Australia's eastern coast, researchers said.
"It's
very surprising because no one's ever seen shark hybrids before," Jess
Morgan of the University of Queensland, the lead researcher, told the AFP news
agency.
"This
is not a common occurrence by any stretch of the imagination."
Morgan and
others said the widespread interspecies breeding across 2,000 kilometers (1,243
miles) of the eastern Australian coastline indicated that the sharks are
dealing with the effects of rising sea temperatures.
Territorial
expansion
"Hybridization
could enable the sharks to adapt to environmental change," said Jennifer
Ovenden, of the Queensland Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries, in a
statement.
The smaller
Australian blacktip favors tropical waters in the north. Its more common cousin
is found mostly in sub-tropical and temperate waters, like along the
south-eastern Australian coastline.
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There could be a new predator on Australia's beaches |
"If it
[the Australian blacktip] hybridizes with the common species it can effectively
shift its range further south into cooler waters, so the effect of this
hybridizing is a range expansion," Morgan said.
Researchers
from the University of Queensland, James Cook University and the states of
Queensland and New South Wales used body measurements as well as genetic
testing, including a nuclear DNA marker inherited by both parents, to confirm
the hybridization.
The researchers
made the discovery while monitoring shark populations off Australia's eastern
coast. Genetic testing proved that sharks that looked to belong to one species
belonged more genetically to the other, Morgan said.
Colin
Simpfendorfer of James Cook University's Fishing and Fisheries Research Centre
said in a statement that more work needed to be done to tie climate change to
the species' hybridization.
He added
that blacktip sharks are among the most understudied species in tropical
Australia.
Genetic
mapping will help establish how long the sharks have been interbreeding.
The
phenomenon could be recent or it may have been happening unbeknownst to
scientists for generations.
"The
results of this research show that we still have a lot to learn about these
important ocean predators," Simpfendorfer said.
Author: Sean Sinico
Editor: Nathan Witkop
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