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Article
Genetic Evidence for Two Species of Elephant in Africa
Science
  • Alfred L. Roca, National Cancer Institute at Frederick
  • Nicholas Georgiadis, Mpala Research Center - Kenya
  • Jill Pecon-Slattery, National Cancer Institute at Frederick
  • Stephen J. O'Brien, National Cancer Institute at Frederick
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-24-2001
Abstract

Elephants from the tropical forests of Africa are morphologically distinct from savannah or bush elephants. Dart-biopsy samples from 195 free-ranging African elephants in 21 populations were examined for DNA sequence variation in four nuclear genes (1732 base pairs). Phylogenetic distinctions between African forest elephant and savannah elephant populations corresponded to 58% of the difference in the same genes between elephant genera Loxodonta (African) and Elephas (Asian). Large genetic distance, multiple genetically fixed nucleotide site differences, morphological and habitat distinctions, and extremely limited hybridization of gene flow between forest and savannah elephants support the recognition and conservation management of two African species: Loxodonta africana and Loxodonta cyclotis.

Comments

©2001 American Association for the Advancement of Science

Additional Comments
GenBank accession #s: AY044919-AY045493
ORCID ID
0000-0001-7353-8301
ResearcherID
N-1726-2015
Citation Information
Alfred L. Roca, Nicholas Georgiadis, Jill Pecon-Slattery and Stephen J. O'Brien. "Genetic Evidence for Two Species of Elephant in Africa" Science Vol. 293 Iss. 5534 (2001) p. 1473 - 1477 ISSN: 0036-8075
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/stephen-obrien/288/