Technology Quarterly | Cracking the code
The sequencing of genetic material is a powerful conservation tool
You can learn a lot from the faeces, skin cells and other traces that animals leave behind
IN SEPTEMBER AND October 2000, the carcasses of several northern hairy-nosed wombats and some fragments of intestine were discovered in Australia’s Epping Forest National Park, apparently left behind by a mystery predator. Cattle farming has shrunk the wombats’ natural habitat and consequently their population, which reached a low of just 20-30 animals in the 1970s before land-management policies helped push numbers back up to roughly 100 in the early 2000s. By sequencing DNA extracted from the Epping Forest remains, researchers identified six males and one female. But what had slain 6% of the known wombat population?
This article appeared in the Technology Quarterly section of the print edition under the headline “Cracking the code”