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Ancient DNA to help solve mysteries of the Canaanites
by Brooks Hays
Washington (UPI) Jul 27, 2017


For some microorganisms, symbiosis is more of a hostage situation
Washington (UPI) Jul 27, 2017 - New analysis of common freshwater bacteria suggests some symbiotic relationships are marred by coercion -- more hostage situation than free exchange.

Polynucleobacter is a genus of freshwater bacteria whose species are typically found living inside euplotid ciliates, a group of single-celled protozoa.

"Most people think symbiosis means there is an evolution toward harmony, a perfect balance of the two partners," Vittorio Boscaro, a biologist at the University of British Columbia, said in a news release. "But although the host needs the bacterium to survive, the bacterium doesn't gain any advantage in this relationship."

Researchers found protozoa snatch up bacteria and host them them for a finite period of time before discarding the bacterium and finding a fresh replacement.

"They're being replaced, just like you change your clothes," said Patrick Keeling, a microbiologist at UBC. "You take advantage of your symbiont until it's no longer useful, and then you get a new one."

When Boscaro and his colleagues sequenced the genome of bacteria living inside euplotes, they found captured bacteria alter their genes haphazardly. They don't evolve to adapt inside the protozoan host; instead, they become genetically corrupted.

Simply put, the bacteria are in an unhealthy relationship. And they don't appear to have the power to leave.

"I like to think of the relationship being more like death row than cooperation -- sure the symbiont is kept safe and well-fed in the short term, but ultimately it's not a good place to be," said Keeling.

The researchers detailed the bacteria-protozoa relationship in a paper published this week in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution.

The Bible mentions the Canaanites, a people of the Ancient Near East, several times. Archaeologists use the word to describe a group of settlers and pastoral nomads living among the southern Levant -- in present day Israel, Palestine, Lebanon, Syria and Jordan -- during the late 2nd millennium BC.

But exactly who they were, where they came from and what happened to them remain open questions.

Those questions may soon have answers, however, thanks to new DNA analysis.

For the first time, scientists have sequenced ancient Canaanite genomes after sequencing DNA material recovered from five Canaanite individuals who lived some 4,000 years in present day Lebanon.

Researchers also sequenced the genomes of 99 modern Lebanese people, allowing scientists to establish relationships among modern and ancient residents of the region. They share the results of their analysis this week in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

"We found that the Canaanites were a mixture of local people who settled in farming villages during the Neolithic period and eastern migrants who arrived in the region about 5,000 years ago," Marc Haber, researcher at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in England, said in a news release. "The present-day Lebanese are likely to be direct descendants of the Canaanites, but they have in addition a small proportion of Eurasian ancestry that may have arrived via conquests by distant populations such as the Assyrians, Persians, or Macedonians."

During the 2nd and 1st millennium BC, conquest-driven genetic mixing was common. And indeed, the Canaanites received an influx for new genes from Eurasian people between 3,800 to 2,200 years. Despite this, the Canaanites and their descendants remained rather genetically distinct.

"In light of the enormously complex history of this region in the last few millennia, it was quite surprising that over 90 percent of the genetic ancestry of present-day Lebanese was derived from the Canaanites," researcher Chris Tyler-Smith said.

Both the genetic and archaeological records suggest the Canaanites have enjoyed cultural and genetic continuity since the Bronze Age.

"For the first time we have genetic evidence for substantial continuity in the region, from the Bronze Age Canaanite population through to the present day," lead excavator Claude Doumet-Serhal said. "These results agree with the continuity seen by archaeologists."

FLORA AND FAUNA
Woman held at S.Africa airport for rhino horn smuggling
Johannesburg (AFP) July 26, 2017
South African police Wednesday arrested a 24-year-old woman with 20 kilogrammes of rhino horn before boarding a flight bound for Hong Kong, a spokesman said. The woman whose nationality has not been revealed, was detained at Johannesburg's O.R. Tambo International Airport while in transit from the Zambian capital Lusaka. Police said a luggage scanner revealed her suitcase "contained 11 p ... read more

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