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UIdaho, WSU study cancer that’s killing tasmanian devils

In this Oct. 17, 2008 file photo, Tex a Tasmanian Devil reacts in his enclosure at Sydney's Taronga Zoo. Fierce as they are, Tasmanian devils can't beat a contagious cancer that threatens to wipe them out. Now scientists think they've found the disease's origin, a step in the race to save Australia's snarling marsupial. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File)
In this Oct. 17, 2008 file photo, Tex a Tasmanian Devil reacts in his enclosure at Sydney's Taronga Zoo. Fierce as they are, Tasmanian devils can't beat a contagious cancer that threatens to wipe them out. Now scientists think they've found the disease's origin, a step in the race to save Australia's snarling marsupial. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File)

Over the past 20 years, tens of thousands of the world’s Tasmanian devils have died of a contagious cancer that spreads when the animals bite each other.

Scientists predicted the cancer, devil facial tumor disease, would drive the species to extinction — but a new study from the University of Idaho, Washington State University and the University of Tasmania shows Tasmanian devils are evolving rapidly in response to the threat. The study was published today in Nature Communications.

Paul Hohenlohe, an assistant professor of biological sciences in the UI College of Science, contributed to the project his expertise in searching for signs of evolutionary change across animal genomes, the full set of genes in an organism’s DNA. More here.



D.F. Oliveria
D.F. (Dave) Oliveria joined The Spokesman-Review in 1984. He currently is a columnist and compiles the Huckleberries Online blog and writes about North Idaho in his Huckleberries column.

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