Researchers recently noticed that the
remains1 of woolly mammoths from the North Sea often possess a 'cervical' (neck)
rib3 -- in fact, 10 times more frequently than in modern elephants (33.3%
versus4 3.3%). In modern animals, these
cervical ribs5(颈肋) are often associated with inbreeding and
adverse6 environmental conditions during
pregnancy7. If the same factors were behind the
anomalies(异常现象) in mammoths, this reproductive stress could have further pushed declining
mammoth2 populations towards ultimate
extinction8. Mammals, even the long-necked giraffes and the short-necked dolphins, almost always have seven neck vertebrae (exceptions being
sloths9,
manatees10 and dugongs), and these vertebrae do not normally possess a rib. Therefore, the presence of a 'cervical rib' (a rib attached to a cervical vertebra) is an unusual event, and is cause for further
investigation11. A cervical rib itself is
relatively12 harmless, but its development often follows
genetic13 or environmental
disturbances14 during early
embryonic15 development. As a result, cervical ribs in most mammals are strongly associated with stillbirths and multiple congenital abnormalities that negatively impact the lifespan of an individual.
Researchers from the Rotterdam Museum of Natural History and the Naturalis Biodiversity Center in Leiden examined mammoth and modern elephant neck vertebrae from several European museum collections. "It had aroused our curiosity to find two cervical vertebrae, with large
articulation16 facets17 for ribs, in the mammoth samples recently dredged from the North Sea. We knew these were just about the last mammoths living there, so we suspected something was happening. Our work now shows that there was indeed a problem in this population," said Jelle Reumer, one of the authors on the study published today in the open access journal PeerJ.
The incidence of abnormal cervical vertebrae in mammoths is much higher than in the modern sample, strongly suggesting a vulnerable condition in the species. Potential factors could include inbreeding (in what is assumed to have been an already small population) as well as harsh conditions such as disease, famine, or cold, all of which can lead to disturbances of embryonic and fetal development. Given the considerable birth defects that are associated with this condition, it is very possible that developmental abnormalities contributed towards the
eventual18 extinction of these late Pleistocene mammoths.
The peer-reviewed study, entitled "Extraordinary incidence of cervical ribs indicates vulnerable condition in Late Pleistocene mammoths" was authored by Jelle Reumer of the Rotterdam Museum of Natural History and Clara ten Broek and Frietson Galis of Naturalis Biodiversity Center (Leiden).