Genetic study shows the red panda is actually two separate species
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[February 27, 2020]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Red pandas, the
bushy-tailed and russet-furred bamboo munchers that dwell in Asian high
forests, are not a single species but rather two distinct ones,
according to the most comprehensive genetic study to date on these
endangered mammals.
Scientists said on Wednesday they found substantial divergences between
the two species - Chinese red pandas and Himalayan red pandas - in three
genetic markers in an analysis of DNA from 65 of the animals.
The recognition of the existence of two separate species could help
guide conservation efforts for a mammal adored by many people even as
its numbers dwindle in the wild, they added.
Chinese red pandas are found in northern Myanmar as well as southeastern
Tibet, Sichuan and Yunnan provinces in China, while Himalayan red pandas
are native to Nepal, India, Bhutan and southern Tibet in China, the
researchers said.
International experts have estimated a total population of roughly
10,000 red pandas in the wild.
"To conserve the genetic uniqueness of the two species, we should avoid
their interbreeding in captivity," said Chinese Academy of Sciences
conservation biologist Yibo Hu, who along with colleague Fuwen Wei led
the study published in the journal Science Advances. "Interbreeding
between species may harm the genetic adaptations already established for
their local habitat environment."
Scientists previously recognized red pandas as divided into two
subspecies. While it had been proposed that these were separate species,
the new study was the first to provide the genetic data necessary to
allow such a judgment.
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A zookeeper strokes a red panda with a twig at the Beijing Wildlife
Park on a hot summer day in Beijing, China July 11, 2017.
REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo
The Himalayan red panda is the scarcer of the two and needs urgent
protection because of low genetic diversity and small population
size, Wu said. The Yalu Zangbu River most likely marks the
geographical boundary separating the two species, not the Nujiang
River as previously believed, Wu added.
The two species also differ in coloration and skull shape.
"The Himalayan red panda has more white on the face, while the face
coat color of the Chinese red panda is redder with less white on it.
The tail rings of the Chinese red panda are more distinct than those
of the Himalayan red panda, with the dark rings being more dark red
and the pale rings being more whitish," Hu said.
Slightly bigger than a domestic cat, red pandas have thick fur, a
short snout and pointed ears, spending much of their life in trees
and dining mostly on bamboo. Major threats to red pandas include
deforestation and degradation of their habitat due to human
development.
Despite similar names, red pandas and giant pandas are not closely
related. Giant pandas are one of the world's eight bear species.
Red pandas, with no close living relatives, are sometimes called
living fossils as the only remaining member of the Ailuridae
mammalian family. They are probably most closely related to a group
that includes weasels, raccoons and skunks.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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