Remember When Elephants Had Tusks? 113
Boing Boing links to an interesting story today. If an antibiotic kills 95% of a germ species, but 5% bear a gene for resistance, indiscriminate use of it will result in a surviving line of entirely resistant germs. But on a slightly larger scale, genetically tusk-free elephants are gaining ground relative to their tusked brethren, says one study, thanks to a nasty antibiotic called poaching. If elephants don't have the decency to go extinct, maybe they'll just hang around to tusklessly remind our grandchildren where billiard balls originally came from, and to invite us to ponder what the last poacher was thinking as he shot the last tusked elephant.
One has to wonder... (Score:3, Insightful)
I seriously doubt they'll go extinct, but tusked elephants may go extinct in the wild.
Re:One has to wonder... (Score:1)
Re:One has to wonder... (Score:1)
Re:One has to wonder... (Score:2)
Re:One has to wonder... (Score:1)
Re:One has to wonder... (Score:1)
Re:One has to wonder... (Score:3, Insightful)
If they're extinct in the wild and only exist in captivity, the species is likely to be limited to a relatively small number of individuals, and possibly not a whole lot of genetic diversity.
Short of some really good luck and exceedingly well-funded and planned management, such a situation screams for it to be extinct in a really short period of time.
Re:One has to wonder... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:One has to wonder... (Score:1)
Re:One has to wonder... (Score:1)
Re:One has to wonder... (Score:1)
It is part of a trend. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It is part of a trend. (Score:1)
Re:It is part of a trend. (Score:2)
Re:It is part of a trend. (Score:1)
Re:It is part of a trend. (Score:2)
Re:It is part of a trend. (Score:1)
Interesting... (Score:3, Interesting)
What we have to ask ourselves though, is, are we doing this to any other animals as well? Forcing evolution, as it could be called? What will be the long term effects? Tuskless elephants is one thing, but there could potentially be something very dangerous coming, besides super bacteria, of course.
Oh no! (Score:1)
Re:Interesting... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
But it takes time for fish to grow that large -- they aren't born that way. Surely they must have a chance to reproduce in their earlier years, before they grow to a more enticing size? This theory has a slight ring of truth to it, but I don't think it's cut and dry.
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
This is not always the case as fish come to sexual maturity at a certain age. In certain species there can be a large variation in the size of the fish as it enters sexual maturity. in these species the large fish will have a lower success
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
I don't understand your use of "suffered." The fish seem to be evolving to be able to evade the fishing nets. Instead of ending up on people's dinner plates, they are still swimming in the sea. Don't you see this is a good example of a species evolving to fit its changing environment?
As people, we look at the circ
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Clearly not, because if getting smaller were a disadvantage, it wouldn't be happening. What you mean is that if human fishing was removed from the picture, the fish might no longer be adapted to their environment. Well, yes. But if they could adapt in such a short time to the pressures of modern fishing, chances are they can adapt back to a more "natural" state in a comparable amount of
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
BTW, does a fish have the buddha-nature? Bloobwoop.
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
Do you know what "survival" means? (Score:5, Insightful)
THIS was one of the dummest thing I've read in weeks.
If you kill elephants, and some survive because of a genetic trait: It's survival of the fittest.
In this case, the fittest being the ones less likely to be shot due to a genetic predisposition to refrain from growing big shiny tusk with high resale value.
Re:Do you know what "survival" means? (Score:1)
You're assuming tusklessness is a genetic trait -- how do you know for sure that it is? Maybe tuskless elephants are just as likely to have tusked offspring as tusked elephants. Not that this is likely, but let's rule out the wacky-but-possible first.
Now here's the trick, you can't just say that tusklessness is passed on genetically because of the rise of tuskless elephants. As GP was pointing out, you get an increase in the incidence of tusklessness if you cull tusked elephants,
Re:Do you know what "survival" means? (Score:3, Informative)
It's either genetic or environmental. And it appears to be occuring in all elephant populations (asian, indian, african, et al). So if it's environmental, it's a very widepread but subtle change. The chances of it not being genetic are vanishingly small.
Re:Do you know what "survival" means? (Score:1)
To clarify, though, you're defining fittest in a narrow scope. Tusks serve a valuable purpose in the lives of elephants. For one, elephants use the tusks to scrape rocks (the one image I remember is scraping the top of a cave) and liberate necessary salts. These new tuskless variants will be unable to do this and their independent survival (without tusked brethen to liberate the salt for them) is questionable.
Re:Do you know what "survival" means? (Score:2)
Yup, the one Darwin meant.
Re:Interesting... (Score:5, Informative)
I have to strongly object to your terminology. Evolution is not an entity or process which can be "forced" into anything. It is simply an observation about what happens in the world.
"Selective pressure" is an incredibly loaded term which anthropomorphizes what's really happening. In this case, what is happening with the elephants is that the ones with tusks are being killed off, and the ones without tusks are not (and it's not any more complicated than that). There is nothing putting "pressure" on the elephants to lose their tusks. The mutations are random and happen without respect to environmental changes. It is the environment which makes some of these mutations more or less favorable but it is not the cause of those mutations.
Suppose you wanted to "force" humans to evolve gills, like fish. Suppose that you did this by rounding up everybody who did not have gills, and drowning them. Do you think this procedure has any chance in hell of causing humans to start growing gills? The reason why not, is that the sort of mutation that could cause that is extremely complex and almost infinitely unlikely. But in the case of the elephants, the tuskless phenotype was present even before the advent of modern hunting.
Evolution has no will, no path, no agenda, no nothing. It can't be forced, pressured, coerced, etc.
Re:Interesting... (Score:3, Insightful)
However by modifying the selective pressures we can have large influences on the directions of evolution. While humans did not create the tuskless phenotype we are contributing to its increase in abundance
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
I agree. I am only raising an objection to the terminology.
Re:Interesting... (Score:3, Insightful)
Several yea
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
After the fall, the institutes funding was cut drastically, and the future of the foxes was threatened, as the 400 they had were too few to stay genetically healthy. AFAIK, the foxes are spread quite widely today.
Here's an indepth paper. [floridalupine.org]
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
are we inadvertantly selecting for traits in other species?
put this way, it pretty obvious that the answer is yes. i guess the real question is: are we doing it to animals that most people will recognize and care about, and are we affecting them in ways we can see?
the parent thread really down-plays the importance of our accidental artificial selection of bacteria. this is way more relevant to human li
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
"selected pressure" is perfectly anthropomorphic, and appropriate. HUMANS are the direct and single cause of tusked elephants being driven to extinction. No one is saying that humans are "mutating" elephants to have no tusks, and nothing is insinuating it. They are saying that dead-ass elephants don't fucking BREED, so their unique genetic attributes are not retained. "survival of the fittest", doesn't say anything about forcing mutation in there, does it?
Y
Re:Interesting... (Score:1, Interesting)
However, it definitely happens in other areas. In Pennsylvania for instance, the hunting of Turkeys by making a fake gobbling sound so that they respond to you as they come closer, has gone on for so long that in some areas male turkeys don't respond to the call -- if anything, they will silently sneak up on a female call, but that's it.
Some selection for traits can also be observed in areas where people "trophy hunt", selecting deer to kill based on the size of th
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
Also, it appears that in the areas where deer are mainly hunted for food, the proportion of meatless deer has started to increase.
Re:Interesting... (Score:3, Insightful)
Dogs? Cats? Cows? Sheep? We've been doing it to pets for millenia, and it has not been harmful (at least not always).
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Not harmful?
Look at german shepards -- most are crippled in old age thanks to excessive breeding.
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
I know many people who would love to breed excessively.
Re:Interesting... (Score:1)
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
It's also been suggested that splotch
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Rapa Nui (Score:2)
Some versions I've heard of the story indicate that the statues were built to praise the bird-man who would bring back the birds and the trees to the island. So they were cutting down their last trees in an effort to fix their environment. Dunno if that's the way it really played out.
I welcome it. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I welcome it. (Score:1)
Re:I welcome it. (Score:3, Funny)
so one time i was reading slashdot...
Poacher of the last tusk (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Poacher of the last tusk (Score:2)
The last tusk will be less than 3 millimeters long. Rich? I spit on the notion.
Tuskless elephant jokes (Score:4, Funny)
A: With a blue tuskless elephant gun, of course.
Q: How do you shoot a yellow tuskless elephant?
A: Have you ever seen a yellow tuskless elephant?
Q: What did Tarzan say when he saw the tuskless elephants coming over the hill?
A: "Here come the tuskless elephants over the hill!"
Q: How do you tell if there have been tuskless elephants in your refrigerator?
A: Footprints in the peanut butter, and no rips in the saran wrap.
Q: What did Charles de Gaulle say when he saw three tuskless elephants in sunglasses coming down the path?
A: Ribbit.
Q: What did Jane say when she saw the tuskless elephants over the hill?
A: "Here come a bunch of grapes over the hill". She was colorblind.
Q: How do you get down off an tuskless elephant?
A: You don't. You get down off a duck.
Re:Tuskless elephant jokes (Score:3, Funny)
One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas, I don't know.
Then we tried to remove the tusks. The tusks. That's not so easy to say. Tusks. You try it some time.
As I say, we tried to remove the tusks. But they were embedded so firmly we couldn't budge them. Of course, in Alabama the Tuscaloosa, but that is entirely ir-elephant to what I was talking about.
Groucho Marx, Animal Crackers [marx-brothers.org]
Don't mock (Score:2)
Re:A list of jokes has been moderated 'insightful' (Score:1)
This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:4, Insightful)
In doing so we create a reputable ivory trade , a great source of work for the local communities
I am not talking about factory farming as i find that disgusting , It should be rather free range
It could also double as a safari trip , ivory could be harvested via profitable hunts (then sold on , including selling of the meat)
Re:This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:1)
Re:This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:1)
Re:This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:5, Insightful)
-molo
Re:This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:2)
Re:This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:2)
Not quite. They tranquilize elephants all the time for wildlife research. While the elephant is down, cover its eyes and take a saws-all to its tusk. No soft tissue damage is required.
-molo
Re:This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:2)
Re:This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:1)
'Awww what a cute kitten.. Did you have it de-tusked yet?'
Re:This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:2)
It might be possible on a free range farm the size of a huge park, but then it'd be the same thing as a nature preserve, and you might as well let them live.
Besides, do we really need a reputable ivory trade? I don't think billiard balls and
Re:This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:2)
I have advocated this before , but one sure way to stiff up the elephant populations and to eliminate illegal poaching is to create elephant farms.
In doing so we create a reputable ivory trade , a great source of work for the local communities
I am not talking about factory farming as i find that disgusting , It should be rather free range
It could also double as a safari trip , ivory could be harvested via profitable hunts (then sold on , including s
Re:This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:2)
Ivory does not come free unlike Copyright infringement
Re:This one is bound to cause controversy (Score:2)
Realities Priorities (Score:4, Interesting)
Nothing suprising here... move along...
Re:Realities Priorities (Score:1)
Re:Realities Priorities (Score:1)
Good point! Eliminate poverty and hunger, and our poaching problems are over!
Thank God for you, TheSloth2001ca, you have saved the elephants.
Re:Realities Priorities (Score:1)
Re:Realities Priorities (Score:1)
There's actually a form of sanctioned "poaching" given to the Eskimos for whales (being that's their only viable food source, and McDonald isn't exactly a healthy food source). The same privilege is given to Japan, again on whales, for "research purposes" on "whale impact" in local fisheries (all of which became sushi, good research indeed).
Re:Realities Priorities (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Realities Priorities (Score:1)
Re:Realities Priorities (Score:2)
Game wardens in many game parks are armed with machine guns, and shoot poachers on sight. Poachers, in turn, do the same. It's been like this for a while, and your average villager knows his chances are better robbing the corner store.
Economic solution: Ownership (Score:1, Interesting)
Instead, today no one can own the Chinese elephants. And even if you do own them, you can't harvest the ivory in the tusks and sell them in a legitimate market. And because China is a communist society, sustainable profits are actively discouraged. Since no one ow
Re:Economic solution: Ownership (Score:2)
Elephants are just not practical: they live too long and take too long to breed. Domesticating them would take sev
Re:Economic solution: Ownership (Score:2)
First episode was last week and they went over that,
but PBS tends to rerun. Check the website for you local schedule.
Re:Economic solution: Ownership (Score:2)
Yeap. Those damned communists getting in the way of profit and exploitation again. I feel so sorry for the elephants.
Re:Economic solution: Ownership (Score:1)
Mod Parent Funny (Score:2)
Re:Economic solution: Ownership (Score:2)
Wow. That's quite a screwed up way of looking at it. The animal that pre-dated the doestication of the cow was the Aurochs. That animal is extinct by the hand of Man. Now, all we have are the decendants of those animals that we specifically bred for their meat quality and milk quality. We have not preserved the animal in its original state, we have
What the poacher was thinking (Score:1, Troll)
"Maybe I can feed my family for one more week"?
Sorry to say this, people, but some things in life are not that simple.
Re:What the poacher was thinking (Score:2)
So I'll just leave 2 tons of fresh meat here to
attract flies, hyenas and rot. Don't get me wrong,
I'm not pro bush meat but your "logic" is astounding.
According to creationists... (Score:2)
Re:According to creationists... (Score:2, Funny)
Clear Genetic Proof? (Score:1)
Safty First (Score:1)
Re:Okay (Score:2)