The evolutionary history of polar bears
The study of the Ursus lineage, including brown bear (Ursus arctos), black bear (Ursus americanus) and polar bear (Ursus maritimus), provides the ability of addressing the subject of adaptation to extreme (salty and glacial) environments in mammals. Moreover, in last few decades, polar bears won public and media attention, being one of the most charismatic species endangered by global warming and Arctic ice melting. To trace history of innovations and determine response to environmental changes in populations of polar bears, two articles published in Science and Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in April and June 2012 provide new data and insights to resolve this question. The absence of fossil of polar bears dating before the late Pleistocene (circa 126 000 years ago) and mitochondrial data, suggesting that polar bear were very closely related to a group of brown bear living in Admiralty, Baranof and Chichagof (ABC) islands in Alaska, previously led to believe that polar bears recently emerged from brown bears. The consequences of this hypotheses would be : Polar bear underwent a very rapid and recent (less than 200 ky ago) adaptation to extreme environment (previously not seen in mammals) Brown bear is a paraphyletic taxon, as …
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