BBC Wildlife - UK (2020-04)

(Antfer) #1
BBC Wildlife 75

EVOLUTION


April 2020

that pizzlies are breeding
and bringing up young. In
2010, when a pizzly bear
was shot in the Canadian
Arctic, genetic tests revealed
that the animal was, in
fact, a second-generation
individual with a grizzly
father and a pizzly mother – a grizzly
pizzly bear.
From the mules engineered by ancient
Greeks to the cattle-bison crosses or
‘beefalo’ produced in North America
today, humans have a long history of
creating hybrids. It’s another way that
our species influences evolution, and
the pizzly bear is just one example.

the temperature continues
to increase.
For those species that fail
to adapt, it is the end of the
road. Scientists estimate
that dozens of species
go extinct every day, and
that extinction rates are
a thousand times greater
than during pre-human
times. These losses are
our doing. Meanwhile,
the survivors are racing
to keep up with the pace
of environmental change.
Human activity is causing
evolution to speed up,
fuelling the emergence
of novel characteristics,
new species and bizarre hybrids.

Meeting in the middle
In the far north, as the sea-ice melts,
polar bears are moving southwards,
whilst grizzly bears are expanding their
range to the north. Somewhere in the
middle, the two species are meeting
and mating. The result is a hybrid with
characteristics of both parent species.

Left: the white-footed
mouse is adapting to
be better suited to a
New York diet. Above:
poaching is leading
to the decline of large
tusks in elephants.

Pizzly bears, as they are called, have
the slender neck of a polar bear but the
humped shoulders of a grizzly. They
have intermediate-coloured fur and
feet that, in appearance, fit somewhere
in-between the flat paddles of the Arctic
species and the clumpy stompers of its
North American relative.
No one knows how common or
otherwise this oddity is, but we do know
Narwhal: Dorling Kindersley/Getty; Darwin: GL Archive/Alamy; kakapo: Frans Lanting/FLPA; tusks: Christian Heinrich/Imagebroker/FLPA; mouse: Mark Mo


ett/Minden/Alamy

Positive change


Conservati ed to steer shaky
evolution onto positive
footings. T case in point.
Decimatedb pecies that plague
itsnative NewZealand,theflightless parrot hit
anall-time low in 1995 when just 51 remained.
Now,thanks to an intensive conservation
project that marries traditional techniques,
suchas habitat management, with innovative
technologies, such as assisted reproduction, the
population has grown to 211. Last year, scientists
finishedmapping the full genetic codes of all adult
individuals, and now the information will be used to
helpguide future matings to create the healthiest,
mostgenetically diverse group of birds possible.

he
ong
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byhumans.
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