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Don't judge a sheep by its coat colour, says genetic researcher PhD candidate studying genetic makeup of sheep in Alaska, Yukon, N.W.T., northern B.C. By Karen McColl, CBC News Posted: May 23, 2017 8:26 AM CT Last Updated: May 23, 2017 8:26 AM CT Environment Yukon has boxes of horn core samples from thinhorn sheep, wrapped in coin envelopes. They are collected and tracked every time a hunter harvests a sheep, and now the samples are being used for research. "Traditionally, the way we defined the sheep was by its colour," says Zijian Sim, a PhD candidate at the University of Alberta. Sheep horn plug Metal plugs, like the one seen in this horn, are used for tracking purposes, after a sheep is harvested. A sample is extracted when the plug is inserted. (Environment Yukon) Not any more. Sim analyzed horn samples from across the thinhorn sheep range of Alaska, Yukon, Northwest Territories and northern B.C. His work supports the theory that two thinhorn sheep groups were separated in different ice-free areas during the last ice age. They became the white dall sheep of present day Alaska and Yukon, and darker stone sheep of Northern B.C. A hybrid of the two species is the fannin sheep, found between the two ranges near Faro and Ross River in the Yukon. After that, it gets a bit fuzzy. Zijian Sim Zijian Sim is a PhD student at the University of Alberta. (Submitted by Zijian Sim) "While we like to put subspecies in boxes, what truly is happening on the ground is that these things exist as a continuum," says Sim. "We used to think, 'OK if you're dark, you're stone, if you're white, you're a dall's' — except now we have these group of sheep who have dark hair but should really be considered dall's sheep [rather] than stone sheep." To fall into either category, the sheep must contain at least 80 per cent of the genetic material of the subspecies. The sheep that fall somewhere in the middle are fannin. New picture of sheep in the North Sim has already analyzed 55 horn samples and he's working on a much larger sample of 3,000 from the four jurisdictions. Dall's ram A dall's ram. Dall's sheep evolved in the ice-free area of present day Alaska during the last ice age. (Environment Yukon) Troy Hegel, an ungulate biologist with Environment Yukon, is working with Sim on the project. He says the next phase is to identify the boundaries where the sheep occur and overlap. "There's an old subspecies map from the '90s that's used quite often to show where dall's sheep and stone sheep are. But no one's that happy with it." Sim's next research release, expected next year, will include an updated map. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...h-genetics-1.4124995 some stone taken in the Yukon may come back as Dall .... | ||
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All this tells me is that all the micro management is a waste of time and is just a way of giving the game department biologists a reason to justify their pay. | |||
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I consider scientific research of this type to be very valuable in managing our rare wildlife and support spending tax monies in this manner. I spent many years working in resource management in western/northern Canada and have witnessed the hard work of these professionals and the value of the results of this work. Sheep, in Canada, have been over-harvested, under studied for generations and so have other species. This needs to change, now. | |||
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Agree. Grizz Indeed, no human being has yet lived under conditions which, considering the prevailing climates of the past, can be regarded as normal. John E Pfeiffer, The Emergence of Man Those who can't skin, can hold a leg. Abraham Lincoln Only one war at a time. Abe Again. | |||
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In 50 or 100 years it won't matter much....there will be no pure white sheep left anyhow. | |||
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ah the story of domestic sheep .... | |||
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