African elephants have drastically dwindled as targets of the illegal ivory trade, but the DNA contained within their tusks is pointing to the very criminal networks that poached them.
Sign up for CNN's Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more.
Researchers used genetic testing on ivory shipments seized by law enforcement and were able to trace the international crime ring shipping the ivory from Africa. The team tested more than 4,000 elephant tusks from 49 different seizures, made between 2002 and 2019, across 12 different African countries. The findings published Monday in the journal Nature Human Behaviour.
Malaysia Latest News, Malaysia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
How the DNA method that caught the Golden State Killer can help catch elephant poachersThe groundbreaking technique is used to approximate the geographic origin of illegal tusks—information that can be critical in identifying poaching hot spots
Read more »
Scientists have found a way to expose poaching criminal networks using DNA from seized elephant tusksDNA from 4,320 tusks of savannah elephants African savanna elephant tusks has been utilized to identify networks for trafficking ivory out of Africa.
Read more »
Macron refuses PCR test in his Moscow visit. To prevent Russia from stealing his DNA?Is it logical to believe that the French president would think that Russia could actually steal his DNA? After all, what would the nation even do with it?
Read more »
Scientists have found a way to expose poaching criminal networks using DNA from seized elephant tusksDNA from 4,320 tusks of savannah elephants African savanna elephant tusks has been utilized to identify networks for trafficking ivory out of Africa.
Read more »
How the DNA method that caught the Golden State Killer can help catch elephant poachersThe groundbreaking technique is used to approximate the geographic origin of illegal tusks—information that can be critical in identifying poaching hot spots
Read more »
Sewage Sampling Already Tracks Covid. What Else Can It Find?Everyone poops—and that reveals traces of pathogens. Comprehensively analyzing wastewater could help find flu and detect the next pandemic.
Read more »