this curious life
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Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind. - Dr. Seuss
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Lonesome George Not the Last of His Kind, After All?

Lonesome George Not the Last of His Kind, After All? | this curious life | Scoop.it
Maybe the late, lamented Galápagos tortoise wasn't the end of his line, after all. A DNA shocker is spurring a hunt for living cousins.

 

'Now, in an area known as Volcano Wolf—on the secluded northern tip of Isabela, another Galápagos island—the researchers have identified 17 hybrid descendants of C.n. abingdoni within a population of 1,667 tortoises.

 

Genetic testing identified three males, nine females, and five juveniles (under the age of 20) with DNA from C.n. abingdoni. The presence of juveniles suggests that purebred specimens may exist on the island too, the researchers said.

 

"Even the parents of some of the older individuals may still be alive today, given that tortoises live for so long and that we detected high levels of ancestry in a few of these hybrids," Yale evolutionary biologist Danielle Edwards said.'

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What Burundi could teach Rwanda about reconciliation

What Burundi could teach Rwanda about reconciliation | this curious life | Scoop.it
When people think of genocide in Africa, Rwanda comes to mind, but neighbouring Burundi has also faced numerous massacres and has addressed ethnicity head on to find healing, writes the BBC's Kevin Mwachiro.

 

'When people think of genocide in Africa, neighbouring Rwanda usually comes to mind after the slaughter of some 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutus in 100 days in 1994.

 

But over the years Burundi, which has a similar ethnic make-up and tensions, has also faced killings by both Tutsi and Hutus, driving a wedge into the fabric of the nation.

 

The most shocking was in 1972, when some estimate up to 300,000 Hutus were massacred in six weeks.'

 

 

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