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Hunter Shoots Rare Grizzly-Polar Bear Cross In Canada
Ottawa (AFP) May 04, 2006 A US hunter in Canada's far north may have killed the first Grizzly-Polar bear cross ever discovered in the wild, officials told AFP Wednesday. Jim Martell, 65, who paid 50,000 Canadian dollars (45,000 US dollars) to hunt Polar bears, shot the animal, described by local media as a "pizzly", a "grolar bear", or Martell's favorite, a "polargrizz" two weeks ago. The Idaho native told The National Post:"Everybody thought it was a Polar bear, and then they started looking more and more and they seen other features that resembled some of a Grizzly as well." The bear had thick, creamy white fur, typical of Polar bears, but its long claws, humped back and shallow face, as well as brown patches around its eyes, nose, back and on one foot are Grizzly traits. Geneticists have linked the two species. They believe Grizzly bears ventured north some 250,000 years ago to hunt seals and that their fur turned white over time. Thus, the Polar bear was born. Odd couples have produced mixed offspring in captivity. But, this is the first apparent discovery of a mixed breed in the wild, officials said. The two species mate at different times of the year and inhabit vastly different regions -- one lives on Arctic ice floes, the other in forests. But hunters have reported seeing grizzlies further north in recent years as the Arctic warms, said Andy Carpenter, mayor of Sachs Harbour, a tiny hamlet on Banks Island where the bear was shot. "The only way they could get here is by walking across the ice," he said. A laboratory in western Canada is expected to solve the mystery in a few weeks after examining a sample of the bear's DNA, said Judy McLinton, a spokeswoman for the Northwest Territories' environment and natural resources department in Yellowknife. If it is found to be a Grizzly bear, Martell, whose hunting license only allowed him to shoot Polar bears, may be charged with shooting the wrong animal, officials said.
Source: Agence France-Presse Related Links - Mobile DNA Part Of Evolutions Toolbox Chevy Chase MD (SPX) May 04, 2006 The repeated copying of a small segment of DNA in the genome of a primeval fish may have been crucial to the transition of ancient animals from sea to land, or to later key evolutionary changes in land vertebrates. |
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