s Home About Us Contact Us Daiji Dubai Al Mazroui & Clevy
Nidhi Land
  Matrimonial |  Properties |  Jobs |  Classifieds |  Achievers |  Astrology |  Ask Doctor |  Cartoon |  Sponsored Greetings |  Red Chillies |  Tips for life |  Tribute |  Debate




      Search in

Tuesday, August 07, 2012 12:21:17 PM (IST)  

Forensic Tool Developed to Track Ivory Traders

Washington, Aug 7 (IANS): Even though trade in ivory has been banned, the poaching of tuskers continues unabated, threatening African elephants.

However, Alfred Roca, assistant professor at the University of Illinois, has found a way to determine where the ivory comes from.

He and his team have sampled elephants at 22 locations in 13 African countries to get sequences of their mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA).

mtDNA is the DNA located in mitochondria, structures within cells that convert the chemical energy from food into a form the cells can use. Most DNA is "nuclear," found in the cell nucleus.

What makes mtDNA a good marker for tracing the origin of ivory is first, that it is transmitted only by females and second, the fact that female elephants do not migrate between herds, the journal Evolutionary Applications reports.

Roca and collaborators wanted to match these fragments to elephants from a specific location.

Nicholas Georgiadis, researcher now at Washington State, used a rifle to shoot a biopsy dart, which would scrape a square cm of skin from the elephant and fall off, according to an Illinois statement.

Georgiadis collected 653 samples that Yasuko Ishida, researcher in Roca's lab, then sequenced and analysed.

She found eight distinct subclades, or subdivisions, of mtDNA - previous research had detected only two to five - seven of which had limited geographical distribution.

Roca and his team combined these results with five earlier trans-national surveys, which allowed them to examine a shorter region of elephant mtDNA in 81 locations in 22 African countries. Among the 101 unique short sequences detected, 62 percent were present in only one country.

More importantly, the geographic information provided by mtDNA was different from the signal provided by nuclear DNA markers used in previous studies.

Nuclear markers distinguished between forest and savanna elephants; the mtDNA marker indicated a precise location. The best method would be to combine both types of markers.

Roca hopes that the method developed in this research will be used by conservationists to determine the provenance of confiscated ivory.

"It is often hard to trace ivory back to where it came from," he said.

"A ship may have left from a certain port in Africa, but that's not necessarily the country where the elephants were poached."


 
Print this Article
Email this article to your friend
 
 
Write your Comments
 
News Title Forensic Tool Developed to Track Ivory Traders
Your Name
Native Place / Place of Residence
Your E-mail
Your Comment
[Please limit your comments within 2000 characters]

You have characters left.
Disclaimer: Please write your correct name and email address. Kindly do not post any personal, abusive, defamatory, infringing, obscene, indecent, discriminatory or unlawful or similar comments. Daijiworld.com will not be responsible for any defamatory message posted under this article.

Please note that under 66A of the IT Act, sending offensive or menacing messages through electronic communication service and sending false messages to cheat, mislead or deceive people or to cause annoyance to them is punishable. It is obligatory on Daijiworld to provide the IP address and other details of senders of such comments, to the authority concerned upon request.

Hence, sending offensive comments using daijiworld will be purely at your own risk, and in no way will Daijiworld.com be held responsible.

Similarly, Daijiworld.com reserves the right to edit / block / delete the messages without notice any content received from readers.
 
Security Validation
Enter the characters in the image above
 
 
Published by Daijiworld Media Pvt Ltd Mangalore
Editor-in-chief : Walter Nandalike


Main Office :
Emporium Complex , C-5 First Floor, Old Pumpwell road, Mangalore, Karnataka. Pin 575002
Telephone : 0091-824-4259372, 4278372 , Fax : 0091-824-2439373
e-mail   General enquiry: office@daijiworld.com , News & Info : news@daijiworld.com
       

Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | About Us
Copyright ©2001 - 2013. All rights reserved.
Our Franchise Offices
Kishoos Enterprises, Maithri Complex, 3rd Floor,
Udupi Service Bus Stand, Udupi, Karnataka. Pin 576101
Telephone : 0091-820-4295571
e-mail : udupi@daijiworld.com
Daijiworld Middle East FZE
P.O.Box: 84772, Dubai, UAE
Tel: 971-50-6597629  Fax: 971-4-2639207
Email: dubai@daijiworld.com