Eggshells reveal birds’ evolutionary secrets
January 4th, 2012 - 2:34 pm ICT by IANSSydney, Jan 4 (IANS) Molecules from eggshells of endangered and extinct birds can tell behaviour and evolutionary history of Australian feathered fauna, reveals a study.
James Haile from Murdoch University, who pioneered the breakthrough technique, said eggshell has been largely overlooked as a source of information, despite its impermeability and resistance to decay, owing largely to the calcium carbonate matrix which acts to protect biomolecules.
Haile says researchers take the eggs of extinct and endangered birds and grind them down before sequencing the DNA to learn new information about these birds, the journal ScienceNetwork WA reported.
“For extinct birds, such as Madagascar’s elephant bird, we extract the DNA and compare that to living birds such as emu, cassowary, ostrich and others — from that we can see how those birds fit into the broader family tree and at what point they diverged,” said Haile, according to a university statement.
“For the endangered birds, we take samples of abandoned eggshells and together with DNA samples from chicks and captive birds develop a population database to get a picture of genetic diversity of the population,” he said.
The application of my research can help to identify smuggled eggs coming into Australia and learn more about the behavior of Australia’s endangered birds for conservation strategies, said Haile.
It could even help determine the precise timing of the fragmentation of the supercontinent Gondwana, he said.
“Elephant bird eggs are the largest ever known, bigger than any dinosaur egg, and very resistant to decay. So they’re an ideal but under research source of DNA,” he added.
- Scientists extract DNA of extinct giant bird from fossil eggs - Mar 10, 2010
- Ancestor of emu and cassowary lost flight after becoming fat and lazy - Jan 26, 2010
- Rare bird thought extinct now declared alive - Sep 28, 2011
- Eggs with pearls, crystals to be showcased in Delhi - Apr 04, 2010
- Emu farming a popular new trend in Orissa - May 29, 2010
- Punjab farmers take to emu farming - May 03, 2010
- Emu rearing venture picking up in Manipur - Mar 10, 2010
- Emu farming spreads wings in Himachal - Aug 06, 2012
- Penguins rally from brink of extinction - Feb 27, 2012
- Africa has two, not one, species of elephant - Dec 22, 2010
- Russian, South Korean scientists vow to revive mammoth - Mar 14, 2012
- 10 mn years old fossils found in Himachal - Jun 11, 2009
- After tigers, tuskers, it's time to save vultures: Ramesh - Feb 17, 2011
- Endangered pheasant species recouping (With Image) - Aug 30, 2011
- Woolly mammoth to be brought back to life in five years - Dec 04, 2011
Tags: biomolecules, bird eggs, breakthrough technique, calcium carbonate, captive birds, conservation strategies, dinosaur egg, dna samples, elephant bird, endangered birds, evolutionary history, extinct birds, genetic diversity, haile, murdoch university, ostrich, population database, precise timing, research source, supercontinent