Telling a quagga by its stripes.If, in a mix-up at a costume shop, a couple were issued the front half of a zebra suit and the back half of a horse, it could be considered a quagga quagga (kwăg`ə), extinct type of zebra. It formerly inhabited open plains in S Africa, where its range overlapped that of the common zebra (Equus burchelli). disguise. But if the masqueraders were pressed as to whether they were more horse or more zebra, the latest biochemical research advises them to insist on zebra. The quagga, a South African animal extinct for more than 100 years, has been a source of confusion among taxonomists. Some contend, on the basis of the quagga skins preserved in museums, that this front-striped animal is a zebra, either a fourth zebra species or a variant of the Plains zebra, whose hindquarter hindquarter the rump and legs, i.e. the loin, pelvis, pelvic limb and associated musculature. asymmetric hindquarter see asymmetric hind quarter syndrome. stripes are dim. But others have argued that the quagga's teeth and skeleton indicate that its nearest relative is the true horse. Biochemists joined the fray last year when muscle tissue was obtained from a salt-preserved quagga pelt in a West German museum. The tissue yielded both proteins and genes that could be analyzed (SN:6/9/84, p. 356). Now the analysis has yielded some results. According to "remarkably concordant" findings on the proteins and on the genes, the quagga was a subspecies subspecies, also called race, a genetically distinct geographical subunit of a species. See also classification. of the Plains zebra, says Jerold M. Lowenstein of the University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States). at San Francisco. He looked at the binding between a sample of quagga proteins and mixtures of antibodies that bind to blood-serum proteins of each of the extant Equus species. The quagga sample bound more of the antibodies against Plains zebra serum than against the other species. Lowenstein calculates that the quagga relationship with the Plains zebra is six times closer than its relationship with the two other zebra species. "We had to use special techniques to show the difference," Lowenstein told SCIENCE NEWS. "There is 99 percent identity on the protein level. All the [Equus] species diverged within the past 5 million years, which is only yesterday in evolutionary terms." The quagga-Plains zebra relationship is further supported by the analysis of quagga mitochondrial mitochondrial pertaining to mitochondria. mitochondrial RNAs a unique set of tRNAs, mRNAs, rRNAs, transcribed from mitochondrial DNA by a mitochondrial-specific RNA polymerase, that account for about 4% of the total cell RNA that genes performed by Russell Higuchi and Allan Wilson at the University of California at Berkeley (body, education) University of California at Berkeley - (UCB) See also Berzerkley, BSD. http://berkeley.edu/. Note to British and Commonwealth readers: that's /berk'lee/, not /bark'lee/ as in British Received Pronunciation. . They find seven times as great a difference between quagga and Mountain zebra DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. as they do between quagga and Plains zebra DNA. "Stripes, the molecules tell us, do make a zebra," Lowenstein concludes in the July 18 NEW SCIENTIST, "and the half-striped quagga was a Plains zebra." |
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