MEDIA ADVISORY
TO: News Directors, Education and Science Reporters
FROM: University Relations
SUBJECT: UAF Biologist Tracking Extinct Bears Published in Science
DATE & TIME: Thursday, March 22, 2002
The evolution of brown bears may be better understood with help from
the radiocarbon dating of bone specimens found in nearly pristine condition
preserved in Alaskas permafrost. Ancient DNA studies conducted on
these specimens are the subject of an article in the March 21 issue of
the journal, "Science" titled, "Dynamics of Pleistocene
Population Extinctions in Beringian Brown Bears." The co-author Paul
Matheus, is a researcher with the University of Alaska Fairbanks in the
Alaska Quaternary Center and the Institute of Arctic Biology.
University of Oxford researchers worked with Matheus to conduct a multi-disciplinary
study of brown bear evolution in Alaska and the Yukon Territory. They
used DNA studies and knowledge of the ecology in the region to explore
what happened to the brown bear over the past 50,000 years, which is the
limit of radiocarbon dating. The dates show that brown bear lived in Alaska
and the Yukon up to 35,000 years ago, but then went extinct and show up
again at 21,000 years. However, the data indicates that bears prior to
35,000 years ago were of a different genetic stock than those that re-emigrated
21,000 years ago.
The authors concluded that the second group did not evolve from the first
group. Instead the younger group derived from a separate population of
brown bear in Eurasia, indicating a new migration of bears. The same thing
happened again sometime after 10,000 years ago, because the brown bear
in this area are not the same genetically as the ones that lived here
between 21,000-10,000 years ago.
"This is all kind of new and strange in terms of concepts of how
ice age mammals moved and evolved and responded to climatic and environmental
changes," said Matheus.
Researchers used stable isotope data to determine aspects of ancient
brown bear diets and compared them to those of the extinct short-faced
bear, which peak between 35-21,000 years ago. They also examined whether
competition between the two would help explain the 14,000 year absence
of the brown bear and the extinction of the short-faced bear around 21,000
years ago.
"We concluded that other factors probably were responsible, because
the two bears were quite different ecologically," Matheus said.
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CONTACT: Paul Matheus, Alaska Quaternary Center (907) 474- 6387or by e-mail at ffpem1@uaf.edu.
CJB/03-21-02/02-054ma

