The Science behind the Taming of Animals
All of us have at some time or other wondered
why some animals are easy to tame while others are difficult if not impossible
to tame. Here come answers to the riddle from the scientists.
In a path breaking research a team of
scientists from Germany, Russia and Sweden have discovered a set of genetic
regions responsible for animal tameness. Most delighted would be animal
breeders, farmers, zoologists, and anyone else who handles and raises animals.
For them this will be a blessing indeed. This can also be used as a way to
produce tame animals.
Frank Albert, a scientist from the Max Planck
Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany and the first author of the
research is all excited about the prospects the new research offers. He says
"Maybe we would be able to domesticate a few of those species where humans
have historically not been successful like the wild African Buffalo." The
study will lead to a detailed understanding of the genetics and biology of
tameness.
The roots of this study
date back to 1972 when researchers in Novosibirsk, USSR (now Russia) caught a
group of rats in the wilderness around the city. Some of the rats were
aggressive while others were tame. The scientists mated the tame with the
aggressive rats and identified regions in the rat genome that cause a rat to be
tamer or more aggressive.
The details are published in the June 2009 issue of the journal Genetics
Reference
1. Albert et al. Genetic Architecture of Tameness in a Rat Model of Animal Domestication. Genetics, 2009; 182 (2): 541 DOI: 10.1534/genetics.109.102186
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