On the Evolutionary Gold Mine Down Under
What the platypus and other Australian species reveal about genetics
- By Dina Modianot-Fox
- Smithsonian.com, August 01, 2008, Subscribe
The bizarre-looking platypus has become the poster animal for evolutionary science. It is a living bridge between a hairy lizard that was our forebear and the mammal we are today. But the recently published platypus genome shows that this native of Australia has an amalgam of genes that resemble those of birds, mammals and reptiles. The research has also highlighted that continent's exceptional importance in genetic research.
"Being cut off from the evolutionary mainstream for 80 million years, Australia specializes in really different plants and animals," says Jenny Graves, a professor of comparative genomics at the Australian National University in Canberra . "Our access to kangaroos and [Tasmanian] devils, dragons, kookaburras and old gum trees presents opportunities to make unique contributions to international genomics."
Millions of years ago when Australia drifted away from the super landmass called Gondwana, its flora and fauna were isolated—a seclusion that makes that country akin to a huge evolutionary lab. More than 80 percent of Australian plant and animal species are endemic, meaning they occur naturally only on that continent. That group includes twelve families of flowering plants, four of birds and seven of mammals, some with fetching names like long-tailed pygmy-possum and tube-nosed insectivorous bat.
This biological heritage has been preserved in a mix of genes found in the platypus, which, along with the echidna (or spiny anteater), belongs to a class of mammals called monotremes, because they have only one opening for reproduction and waste elimination.
Like other mammals, the platypus has fur, thermoregulates and lactates, although it doesn't have nipples (the young lap up the milk from the mother's abdomen). But it lays eggs like reptiles and birds and the male platypus carries venom (in spurs in its hind legs), yet another feature found in some reptiles, while its sperm and sexual makeup are close to those of the chicken.
Graves, co-leader of the platypus genome project and one of 26 Australians out of the 100 international scientists who participated, has won several science awards and has been called a "national treasure" for her groundbreaking work on native species. An authority on sex determination, she has spent decades researching the platypus and that iconic marsupial, the kangaroo—and suggested the genomic studies on both.
The platypus genome is now done, sending ripples of excitement through the scientific community. And the kangaroo riddle too is about to be solved, with publication of that animal's genome due in the next few months.
Under a project partly funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), Australian scientists recently finished sequencing the DNA of the tammar wallaby—a small member of the kangaroo family. Graves, director of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Kangaroo Genomics, and her colleagues are in the process of assembling it and using it to explore kangaroo biology and pinpoint important human genes.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (3)
Platypus's are really cute and furry. i love platypus's!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by Kristy on April 23,2010 | 01:53 PM
For your info, yes, birds DO have a sort of belly button where the egg sack connected. It is an 'outie', and when exotic birds are raised in captivity their navel is often disinfected for safety.
Posted by Kit Kederich on August 15,2008 | 12:55 AM
I have wondered for years whether monotremes or marsupials have belly buttons. It would seem that they do not since neither have placentas. However, does a chicken have a belly button from the embryo's connection to the yolk sac? Perhaps you have the answer -- it so, please let me know. Thanks!
Posted by Sue Ellen Alishouse on July 27,2008 | 04:55 PM