Dark and Light-coated Soay rams
Reuters
Wild sheep on a remote Scottish island are shrinking, and scientists blame global warming.
Soay sheep are on average 5 percent smaller than 25 years ago, an indication climate change can have a rapid effect on natural populations and a sign of possible more widespread changes in future, researchers said on Thursday.
The island of Hirta's shrinking sheep are notable because classical evolutionary theory suggests they should actually get bigger over time, since larger animals tend to be more likely to survive and reproduce than smaller ones.
But now, due to climate change, grass for food is available for more of the year, making survival conditions less challenging, so even slow-growing sheep have a chance of making it and producing smaller offspring in turn.
"It's probably a bit too early to predict that we'll have Chihuahuas running around herding pygmy sheep in say 100 years time," Tim Coulson of Imperial College London, who led the study
published in the journal Science, told reporters.
"In our future work we are going to try and draw these strands together to provide a more comprehensive understanding of the way that climate change is influencing genetic change."
(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Matthew Jones)
Sad case.... but at least we can step up efforts to curb the dwindling numbers...
Originally posted by Bangulzai:there is no conclusion as to animals should get bigger over time. small animals fit for small food, big animals fit for big food. like cats and tigers from the felidae family
Less mutton production?
Originally posted by Chew Bakar:Less mutton production?
I dun really eat mutton actually..so that doesn't affect me.
By once Hari Raya Haji comes...