Polar bears are all descended from Irish brown bears

IT’S a long way from here to the Arctic Circle, but scientists have discovered polar bears can trace their family tree to Ireland.

Polar bears are all descended from Irish brown bears

Genetic evidence shows the furry white giants are descended from Irish brown bears that lived during the last Ice Age.

Modern polar bears share a distinct DNA sequence, passed down the female line, with their now-extinct brown ancestors.

However, the same DNA fingerprint is absent from other species of brown bear alive today.

It is thought the link arose from interbreeding between prehistoric polar bears and female brown bears when their paths crossed as the Irish climate cooled.

Scientists made the discovery after analysing DNA in mitochondria — tiny powerplants in cells — that is only passed from a mother to her offspring.

Dr Ceiridwen Edwards, from Oxford University, a member of the international team that carried out the study, said: “Hybridisation between ancient Irish brown bears and polar bears has led to the complete replacement of the original polar bear mitochondria.

“This maternal lineage is now present in all modern polar bears.”

Polar and brown bears are hugely different in terms of body size, skin and coat colour, fur type, tooth structure and many other physical features.

They are also very distinct behaviourally.

Polar bears, the world’s largest carnivores, are expert swimmers which prey on seals, while forest-living brown bears climb and have a varied omnivorous diet.

Yet the two appear to mate successfully whenever they come into contact.

Climate change is believed to have produced mating opportunities for the two distinct species at various times in the past 100,000 years.

Polar bears may have moved into what is now Ireland when the region was experiencing much cooler temperatures than it is today. At the same time, brown bears may have been pushed towards the coast by advancing ice sheets.

Warmer periods may also bring the species together as melting glacial ice and rising sea levels force polar bears to retreat inland.

The research, published in the journal Current Biology, was carried out by scientists from the US, Ireland, Belgium, Spain, Denmark, Russia and Sweden, who extracted mitochondrial DNA from the teeth and bones of 17 bears found at eight cave sites across Ireland.

Ten Irish brown bears from the Ice Age period between 10,000 and 38,000 years ago had the maternal DNA that is now seen in every polar bear.

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