Researchers from The University of Adelaide in Australia studied the ancient DNA extracted from fossil bones and museum specimens of Tasmanian tiger or the thylacine.
They traced the history of the populations of Tasmanian tiger, the largest known carnivorous marsupial of modern times, over the last 30,000 years.
The researchers found that a large and genetically diverse population of thylacines lived in western regions of Australia right up to their extinction from the mainland around 3,000 years ago, separated from the eastern population.
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"The thylacine was a marsupial carnivore, now infamous for its recent human-driven extinction from Tasmania following the arrival of Europeans and their bounty hunting schemes," said Jeremy Austin, Associate Professor at The University of Adelaide.
Thylacines once lived across most of the Australian mainland, but by the time Europeans arrived in the late 1700s they were found only in Tasmania.
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The researchers generated 51 new thylacine mitrochondrial DNA genome sequences from fossil bones and museum specimens - the largest dataset of thylacine DNA to date.
This provided the first genetic evidence that mainland thylacines split into eastern and western populations in southern Australia before the last Ice Age peak of about 25,000 years ago.
"The ancient DNA tells us that the mainland extinction was rapid, and not the result of intrinsic factors such as inbreeding or loss of genetic diversity," said White.
"We also found evidence of a population crash, reducing numbers and genetic diversity of thylacines in Tasmania around the same time," Austin added.
"This mirrors what happened with another carnivorous marsupial, the Tasmanian devil, which still lives in Tasmania. Unlike the devil, however, it appears that the population of thylacines was expanding at the time of European arrival," said Austen.
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