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Inbred koalas may not be at extinction risk

AUSTRALIA, March 8: Recent research on koalas challenges conventional assumptions about genetic health and extinction risk. Koala populations across Australia show a complex picture: northern populations, often considered genetically diverse, are declining and carrying more harmful genetic variants, while southern populations, historically inbred due to severe population crashes, are now expanding and undergoing genetic recovery.
The study analyzed DNA from 418 koalas across 27 populations in Queensland, New South Wales, and Victoria, reconstructing population histories and examining how genetic variants respond to decline and recovery. The findings reveal that genetic diversity is not static. When populations expand, recombination reshuffles DNA, creating new genetic variation and boosting evolutionary potential. This process can allow populations to recover even before traditional genetic indicators detect improvements. Conversely, populations appearing genetically healthy may be at risk if numbers are declining rapidly.
Victorian koalas, for example, show genetic signatures of past crashes when fewer than 1,000 individuals remained, yet their genes are now recombining and generating new variation. Meanwhile, northern populations, despite higher apparent diversity, face population declines, highlighting the need to evaluate both population trajectory and genetic trends.
The study emphasizes that relying solely on static genetic indicators can mislead conservation efforts. Extinction risk depends not just on diversity levels but also on population trends, recombination, and the emergence of new genetic variants. Koalas demonstrate that recovery is possible and detectable if researchers consider historical context and ongoing dynamics.
This insight has broader implications for conservation genomics: managing threatened species effectively requires tracking where populations have come from and where they are headed, rather than assuming current genetic diversity alone predicts survival. Koalas, long seen as symbols of conservation crises, now offer a clear example of how populations can rebound genetically when their growth trajectories and evolutionary potential are properly assessed. (The Conversation)

Olympic gold medalist and Grand Marhsal Eileen Gu waves during the Chinese New Year Parade in San Francisco, on Saturday. (PTI)

 

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