Ancient DNA from fossil equids: a milestone in palaeogenetics
Thackeray
News & Views
Ancient DNA from fossil equids: A milestone in
palaeogenetics
Authors:
J. Francis Thackeray1
Affiliation:
1
Institute for Human
Evolution, University of
the Witwatersrand,
South Africa
email:
Francis.thackeray@wits.
ac.za
South African Journal of Science
Article #111
Postal address:
Institute for Human
Evolution, University of
the Witwatersrand, PO
WITS, Johannesburg 2050,
South Africa
How to cite this article:
Thackeray JF. Ancient
DNA from fossil
equids: A milestone in
palaeogenetics. S Afr J Sci.
2010;106(1/2), Art. #111,
2 pages. DOI: 10.4102/sajs.
v106i1/2.111
This article is available
at:
http://www.sajs.co.za
© 2010. The Authors.
Licensee: OpenJournals
Publishing. This work
is licensed under the
Creative Commons
Attribution License.
4
S Afr J Sci
The family Equidae includes a diversity of extant species in the single genus Equus, notably horses
(E. caballus and E. przewalskii) and a group called the non-caballines (which includes both Asian and
African asses, as well as African zebras). The fossil record, however, shows even more remarkable
diversity: within the past 5 million years at least 12 equid genera have been documented, including
Hipparion, which is known from Plio-Pleistocene deposits in the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage
Site in South Africa. A linear evolutionary sequence from a hyracotherian ancestor was proposed
by Othaniel Marsh and championed by Thomas Huxley, but the evolution of equids within the past
55 million years is now recognized as being much more complex. Palaeontologists such as Basil
Cooke, Rufus Churcher, Vera Eisenmann and Alan Gentry have generally relied on morphology and
measurements for purposes of addressing the taxonomy of southern African Equidae, as others have
done for equids from other areas. More recently the potential of genetic data has been demonstrated,
most remarkably in a study published in December by Orlando et al.1
In the 1980s, Higuchi et al.2,3 succeeded in isolating mitochondrial DNA from the tissue of a museum
specimen of the partially striped South African Cape ‘quagga’, which became extinct in the 19th
century. The genetic results stimulated a great deal of discussion as to whether the Cape quagga was
distinct at the species level from the more completely striped Burchell’s zebra.4,5
Genetic techniques to analyse modern and ancient DNA have improved dramatically within the past
25 years. A striking demonstration of this was Orlando et al.’s successful recovery of a DNA from 22 of
35 teeth of Equus, dating to the Late Pleistocene or Holocene. Four of the teeth which were successfully
analysed for ancient DNA were attributed to E. capensis, a species which has been thought to have
become extinct in South Africa in the Late Quaternary. Other fossil equid specimens in the analysis
were from sites in Europe, Asia and the American continents.
The late Reinhold Rau, taxidermist at the South African Museum (now part of the Iziko Museums
of Cape Town), was delighted by the initial mitochondrial DNA analyses because he had observed
a gradation in the degree of striping from north to south, which suggested clinal variation without
a clear boundary between two taxa.6,7 Similar sentiments were expressed by Thackeray4,5 on the basis
of variation in the entoflexid of a lower premolar (P₄). He used modern museum specimens of equids
from the Transvaal Museum (Northern Flagship Institution), the Natural History Museum (London)
and the American Museum of Natural History (New York) for comparative purposes, as well as fossil
equid specimens from Wonderwerk Cave, near Kuruman in the Northern Cape Province of South
Africa, which has a long Quaternary sequence. Wonderwerk is particularly interesting, as it is situated
at the northern limit of the distribution of the partially striped ‘quagga’ and close to the southern limit
Source: Photograph taken by Frederick York and Frank Haes. Downloaded from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quagga
A partially striped quagga (Equus quagga quagga) photographed alive in 1870 in the Regent’s Park Zoo in London
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No. 1/2
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News & Views
of that of the plains zebra. The latter was formerly classified as
E. burchelli, but was reclassified as E. q. burchelli, distinct at a
subspecies level from the historically extinct E. q. quagga on the
basis of mitochondrial DNA analyses by Higuchi et al.2,3
4. Thackeray JF. Zebras from Wonderwerk Cave, northern
Cape Province: Attempts to distinguish Equus burchelli and
E. quagga. S Afr J Sci. 1988;84:99−101.
5. Thackeray JF. Morphometric, palaeoecological and
taxonomic considerations of southern African zebras:
Attempts to distinguish the quagga. S Afr J Sci.
1997;93:89−93.
6. Rau RE. Revised list of the preserved material of the extinct
Cape Colony Quagga, Equus quagga quagga (Gmelin). Ann S
Afr Mus. 1974;65:41−86.
7. Rau RE. Additions to the revised list of preserved material
of the extinct Cape Colony Quagga and notes on the
relationship and distribution of southern Plains Zebras.
Annals of the South African Museum, 1978;77:27−45.
8. Churcher CS. The extinct Cape zebra. Sagittarius. 1986;1:4−5.
9. Thackeray JF, Brink JS. Damaliscus niro horns from
Wonderwerk Cave and other Pleistocene sites:
Morphological
and
chronological
considerations.
Palaeontol Afr. 2004;40:89−93.
10. Thackeray JF, Lee-Thorp JA. Isotopic analysis of equid
teeth from Wonderwerk Cave, northern Cape Province,
South Africa. Palaeogeogr palaeoclimateol palaeoecol.
1992;99:141−150.
The extraordinary ancient DNA results by Orlando et al.1 were
published in a recent issue of the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences. They were obtained from two separate
laboratories: one in Lyon in France under Ludovic Orlando
himself and the other, at Adelaide at the Australian Centre for
Ancient DNA, under the direction of Alan Cooper. The paper
was co-authored by a team of 21 other researchers from many
parts of the world.
After checking and controlling for contamination, the team
used the DNA results to explore phylogenetic relationships. The
DNA clearly separated Old World non-caballine equids from
caballine and New World horses. In the case of Africa, the four
specimens attributed to E. capensis (three from Wonderwerk
Cave, and one from Glen Craig Shelter near Port Elizabeth)
grouped closely with specimens attributed to E. q burchelli and
E. q quagga. Specimens of the latter taxon were obtained from
the Iziko Museums (South Africa), the Yale Peabody Museum
(New Haven, USA), as well as the Darmstadt and Berlin
museums in Germany.
Equus greyvi from Ethiopia and Kenya appears to group more
closely with Asian asses than with the South African zebras.
The mountain zebra (E. hartmannae) does not group with E q.
quagga or E. q. burchelli. Instead, the latter two taxa are more
closely related to each other than either is to the mountain
zebra, E. hartmannae.
These exciting results constitute an important milestone in
the (...truncated)