All posts tagged: interbreeding

Neanderthal males preferred human females, genetic study finds

Neanderthal males preferred human females, genetic study finds

Thin stretches of the human X chromosome look oddly empty when you scan for Neanderthal DNA. Geneticists even have a name for the gaps: “Neanderthal deserts.” They sit there like blank tape in an otherwise crowded recording. For years, the standard story went like this: Neanderthal DNA landed in our ancestors’ genomes. However, some of it was harmful, especially on the X chromosome. Natural selection, the thinking said, gradually stripped those “toxic” variants away. A new analysis from Sarah Tishkoff’s lab at the University of Pennsylvania argues that the emptiness may say more about who paired with whom than which genes were dangerous. In Science, the team reports a mirror-image pattern inside Neanderthal genomes. Neanderthals carried unusually high levels of modern human DNA on their X chromosomes compared with the rest of their genome. That reversal, they say, makes simple “toxicity” a much harder explanation to defend. The deserts and the old assumption “Along our X chromosomes, we have these missing swaths of Neanderthal DNA we call ‘Neanderthal deserts,’” says Alexander Platt, a senior research …

Grolar and pizzly bears: What the family drama of interbreeding polar and grizzly bears reveals

Grolar and pizzly bears: What the family drama of interbreeding polar and grizzly bears reveals

A grolar bear in the Arctic Steven J. Kazlowski/Alamy Meet our story’s protagonist: a female polar bear. Displaced by shrinking sea ice in the Arctic, she was forced to wander south, deeper into the Canadian Northwest Territories. Here, our lady in white encountered a couple of handsome grizzly bears. She fell for both of them and had two cubs by each – three “grolar bear” daughters and a son. Thus began a remarkable dynasty, a lineage as intertwined as any in a Shakespearean tragedy. The next phase was equally as unlikely. Once one of the daughters reached adulthood, she mated with her own biological father and also her mother’s other grizzly suitor – essentially her stepfather. The result? Four cubs that were genetically her siblings, children and cousins, all at once. In 2006, a hunter in the Canadian Arctic shot dead an animal displaying physical characteristics of both grizzly and polar bears. Genetic tests later confirmed that it was a grolar, a member of this modern hybrid family. A decade afterwards, when researchers revealed the …