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Male Mammoths Died in ‘Silly Ways’ More Often Than Females, Study Finds

thrary: Male Mammoths Died in ‘Silly Ways’ More Often Than Females, Study Finds nyt Swallowed by a sinkhole. Washed away by a mudflow. Drowned after falling through thin ice. These are the fates that many unlucky mammoths suffered in Siberia thousands of years ago. Their well-preserved fossils have provided paleobiologists with insight into their prehistoric lives. Now, after performing a genetic analysis on the remains from the furry victims of natural traps, a team of scientists made a striking discovery: Most were male. “In many species, males tend to do somewhat stupid things that end up getting them killed in silly ways, and it appears that may have been true for mammoths also,” said Love Dalén, an evolutionary biologist from the Swedish Museum of Natural History. In a study published Thursday in the journal Current Biology, he and his colleagues analyzed DNA from nearly 100 mammoth bones, teeth and tusks, and found that about two-thirds came from males. They speculate the reason for the skewed sex-ratio may have to do with the risky behavior that young males take after leaving the protection of their mothers to live on their own. “Old females are very knowledgeable, they know best,” he said. The finding was an accident, according to Patrícia Pečnerová, a doctoral student at Stockholm University and lead author on the study. It came while she was entering data for a different project on mammoth genetics. “While filling this in on the spreadsheet we saw that there were too many males, more than there should be,” she said. “We were really surprised to see there were more than twice as many males as females because there was no previous research or indication that that should be the case.” Continue reading the main story Related Coverage Under a Farmer’s Field: A Woolly Mammoth in Michigan OCT. 2, 2015 The Mammoth Cometh FEB. 27, 2014 The Woolly Mammoth’s Last Stand MARCH 2, 2017 TRILOBITES Island’s Mammoths May Have Been Thirsty at Their Extinction AUG. 1, 2016 Trilobites Unearthing fascinating morsels of science. Rock Carvings of Ancient Dogs Getting Taught New Tricks NOV 20 Same Oceans, Similar Prey, Two Very Different Necks NOV 17 How Snapdragons Beckon Bees With More Than One Color NOV 17 A Population of Billions May Have Contributed to This Bird’s Extinction NOV 16 Chimps Tailor Alarms to What Other Chimps Know NOV 15 See More » A previous study of mammoth remains, in Hot Springs, S.D., had found that among 14 dead specimens, 13 were young adult males and only one was female. But Ms. Pečnerová’s study investigated sex ratios using genetics. Photo A mammoth tusk found in Chukotka, Siberia, by researchers Patrícia Pečnerová and Love Dalén on their most recent trip to the field. Credit Patrícia Pečnerová The 98 specimens that the team had analyzed came from across the northern part of Siberia and had been collected over the course of four decades. The oldest were more than 60,000 years old, and the youngest, a specimen known as “Lonely Boy,” was about 4,000 years old. The genetic data did not provide insight into how old the mammoths were when they died, only their sex. To obtain the DNA, the team first had to limit contamination. For that, they worked in a clean laboratory and wore lab suits similar to what Ebola doctors wear. They shaved off a few millimeters from the surface of their samples and then drilled into them to extract genetic data. They found that 66 were males and 29 were females. The biggest limitation in the study is that their explanation for the skew is speculative and based mostly on the behavior of present-day elephants. The thought is that mammoths, like today’s elephants, lived in matriarchal societies where adult females protected the young. But around the ages of 14 or 15 when puberty set in, males left their herd and either became loners or joined bachelor groups, which were often led by inexperienced males. That was when they were more likely to do something risky, and find themselves stuck in frozen muck. Newsletter Sign Up Continue reading the main story Science Times We’ll bring you stories that capture the wonders of the human body, nature and the cosmos. You agree to receive occasional updates and special offers for The New York Times's products and services. See Sample Privacy Policy Opt out or contact us anytime The natural traps buried their bodies quickly, protecting them from scavengers. The researchers said that their findings say nothing about the sex ratio of mammoths when they were alive, which they think may have been 50-50, only that males were more likely to die in ways that kept their remains preserved for thousands of years. Beth Shapiro, an evolutionary molecular biologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who was not involved in the study, said she was surprised by the results and that the team’s hypothesis was sensible given what we know about elephant behavior. She added that it would be interesting to see if there is a sex ratio difference for other prehistoric mammals preserved in the permafrost, like bison and horses. Daniel Fisher, a paleontologist at the University of Michigan, said the hypothesis was well-founded, but that tusks should not have been used in the study because males often broke their tusks while fighting each other, but that did not mean they died. The authors said that even discounting their tusk fragments and only using teeth, bone and hair samples, they still had more dead males.

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