Google AI
The Times Australia
The Times World News

.

How did ancient moa survive the ice age – and what can they teach us about modern climate change?

  • Written by Nic Rawlence, Senior Lecturer in Ancient DNA, University of Otago
How did ancient moa survive the ice age – and what can they teach us about modern climate change?

One species of iconic moa was almost wiped out during the last ice age, according to recently published research[1]. But a small population survived in a modest patch of forest at the bottom of New Zealand’s South Island, and rapidly spread back up its east coast once the climate began to warm.

What we’re learning about this remarkable survival story has implications for the way we can help living species adapt to climate change, and how we conserve and restore what may be important future habitats.

Growing to around 80kg and up to 1.8 metres tall, the eastern moa[2] was one of the smaller of the nine extinct moa species. It got its name because its fossil bones have been found in sand dunes, swamps, caves and middens all along the eastern parts of the South Island – Southland, Otago, Canterbury and Marlborough.

Eastern moa became extinct from over-hunting and habitat destruction by humans, and possibly predation[3] by kurī (dogs) and kiore (rats). But were eastern moa populations thriving when people arrived, or were they already in trouble due to ancient climate change?

Skull of an eastern moa. Genetic information can be obtained from moa bones even after thousands of years. Te Papa CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

Refuge in the south

Between 29,000 and 19,000 years ago, New Zealand was in the grip of an ice age. Glaciers were much larger and more widespread than they are today, and the distribution of grasslands and forests changed as the climate became colder and drier.

Current climate change threatens the survival of many different species, and the same was true of climate change thousands of years ago. The fossil record hints that the ice age was bad news for eastern moa, as few eastern moa bones from this period have been discovered.

But a lack of fossils doesn’t necessarily mean a species was doing it tough. Perhaps they just avoided the caves and swamps where we might eventually discover their bones.

Read more: How a change in climate wiped out the 'Siberian unicorn'[4]

To find out more, we sequenced DNA from dozens of eastern moa bones to see how their genetic diversity and population size changed over the past 30,000 years.

Large and healthy animal populations tend to have high genetic diversity, while low genetic diversity can be a sign that a population is in decline. We found eastern moa had very low genetic diversity immediately after the last ice age.

So eastern moa didn’t cope well with the ice age climate – but how did they manage to escape extinction? Our study provides a clue: their genetic diversity was highest in the very south of the South Island.

Rimu were prominent in the podocarp forests that eastern moa preferred. The distribution of these forests changed dramatically during the ice age. Katja Schulz/Flickr CC-BY 2.0

Preserving future habitats

During the ice age, grassland replaced wet podocarp forests in many areas. Those forests were the favourite habitat of eastern moa, possibly explaining why they struggled to survive.

Luckily for eastern moa, however, small pockets of forest survived[5] in southern New Zealand during this time. While eastern moa disappeared from most of the country, our study suggests they clung on in remnant forest at the very south of the South Island.

Scientists have a special name for pockets of habitat where species can shelter and endure climate change – “refugia”.

Read more: How the warming world could turn many plants and animals into climate refugees[6]

Once the climate began to return to pre-ice age conditions, eastern moa were able to return to parts of the country they had formerly occupied. They bounced back so well that they were the most common moa in some parts of New Zealand at the time of Polynesian arrival.

Ancient DNA from fossils across the world has shown that refugia play an important role in allowing species to adapt to climate change. The story of eastern moa shows this is equally true in New Zealand.

Importantly, though, the eastern moa was affected differently to other moa, showing not all species are affected by climate change in the same way. Our study emphasises the need to conserve and restore a diverse range of habitats for the future, given the places where species are found today may be unsuitable for them in the very near future.

By ensuring that species can continue to find appropriate refugia, we may reduce the number that become extinct as a result of our global impacts on the climate.

Read more https://theconversation.com/how-did-ancient-moa-survive-the-ice-age-and-what-can-they-teach-us-about-modern-climate-change-183350

Times Magazine

Why Is Professional Porsche Servicing Important for Performance and Longevity?

Owning a Porsche is a symbol of precision engineering, luxury, and high performance. To maintain t...

6 ways your smartwatch is lying to you, according to science

You check your smartwatch after a run. Your fitness score has dropped. You’ve burnt hardly any...

Has the adoption of electric vehicles led to new forms of electricity theft

Why the concern exists Electric vehicles (EVs) like the Tesla Model 3 or Nissan Leaf shift “fue...

Adobe Ushers in a New Era of Creativity with New Creative Agent and Generative AI Innovations in Adobe Firefly

Adobe (Nasdaq: ADBE) — the global technology leader that unleashes creativity, productivity and ...

CRO Tech Stack: A Technical Guide to Conversion Rate Optimization Tools

The fascinating thing is that the value of this website lies in the fact that creating a high-cali...

How Decentralised Applications Are Reshaping Enterprise Software in Australia

Australian businesses are experiencing a quiet revolution in how they manage data, execute agreeme...

The Times Features

The Coalition wants NDIS reform to focus on 3 things. H…

The government is expected to announce further changes to the National Disability Insurance Sche...

Power Bills: What Are the Options to Decrease What a Fa…

Australian households are being told, repeatedly, to “use less power.” Turn off lights. Shorten...

The Times Launches Dedicated Property Advertising Platf…

In a significant expansion of its digital media offering, The Times has formally launched TimesA...

Can I get a free flu shot? And will it cover ‘super K’?…

For many of us, flu can mean a nasty few weeks of illness. But for the very young and old, and...

Mother’s Day, The Lodge Dining Room

Her Day, The Lodge Way This Mother’s Day, The Lodge Dining Room presents a refined take on high...

The Albanese Government’s plan to impose a retrospectiv…

LABOR’S RETROSPECTIVE TAX GRAB RISKS 3 MILLION JOBS The Albanese Government’s plan to impose a retr...

Court outcome reinforces wildlife trafficking will not …

A 20-year-old man has been fined close to $50,000 and ordered to pay costs after pleading guilty t...

Businesses tap UOW PhD researchers to accelerate innova…

Industry internship program connects businesses with research talent to fast-track innovation an...

Olivia Colman, Kate Box to join an exclusive Live Q…

Photo credit : Photo Credit Mark De BlokFresh out of cinemas, JIMPA - the new film by acclaimed di...