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"So finding species at both ends of the Earth
-- some of which don't have a known connection in between -- raises a whole bunch of evolutionary questions," he said. Hopcroft and other polar researchers will now try to determine how long these species have been separated and whether they have drifted apart genetically. David Barnes, of the British Antarctic Survey, said there a number of possibilities to explain how similar species live so far apart. Some may have traveled along the deep-sea currents that link the poles or may have thrived during the height of the last ice age about 20,000 years ago when the polar environment was expanded and the two habitats were closer. Hopcroft and Barnes cautioned that more work needs to be done to confirm whether the 235 species are indeed the same or differ genetically. "Painstaking work by geneticists investigating both nuclear and mitochondrial genes will only be able to confirm this," Barnes said in an e-mail interview. "It may be they separated sometime ago but similar selective pressures have meant they have not changed much." ___ On the Net: Census of Marine Life: http://www.coml.org/ Arctic Ocean Diversity: http://www.arcodiv.org/ Census of Antarctic Marine Life:
http://www.caml.aq/
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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