Genetic Weaknesses and Human Impact Led to Tasmanian Tiger's Extinction, Study Finds

August 27, 2025
Genetic Weaknesses and Human Impact Led to Tasmanian Tiger's Extinction, Study Finds
  • The gene losses predate sea-level rise and isolation events and occurred during a period of climate change when the thylacine was expanding as a hypercarnivore.

  • Overall, the story presents a nuanced view that extinction arose from multiple interacting factors rather than a single cause.

  • The study argues that the Tasmanian tiger’s extinction resulted from a combination of long-term genetic vulnerability and later human pressures, including hunting, bounties, and threats from dingoes.

  • The lineage lost at least four genes (SAMD9L, HSD17B13, CUZD1, VWA7) over millions of years, a pattern not common among marsupials.

  • These gene losses could have broad effects, such as weaker antiviral defenses, altered metabolism, potential lactation changes, and higher susceptibility to cancer and pancreatitis.

  • Researchers examined the thylacine genome and compared it with related marsupials to understand how genetic factors might have raised extinction risk.

  • While climate-driven reductions in genetic diversity likely contributed, confirming a direct link to disease susceptibility would require further research.

Summary based on 1 source


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