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Online tool speeds response to elephant poaching by tracing ivory to source

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A new tool uses an interactive database of geographic and genetic information to help authorities quickly identify where the confiscated tusks of African elephants were originally poached.

Developed by an international team of researchers, the Loxodonta Localizer matches genetic sequences from poached ivory to those stored in the database. It relies on genetic information from a small, highly variable region of mitochondrial DNA from African elephants.

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Protect forest elephants to conserve ecosystems, not DNA

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Although it is erroneously treated as a subspecies, the dwindling African forest elephant is a genetically distinct species. New University of Illinois research has found that forest elephant populations across Central Africa are genetically quite similar to one another. Conserving this critically endangered species across its range is crucial to preserving local plant diversity in Central and West African Afrotropical forests--meaning conservationists could save many species by protecting one.

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Desert elephants pass on knowledge—not mutations—to survive

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New Petition Seeks to Save Elephants, End Ivory Importation in U.S.

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Are We Exterminating One African Elephant by Not Recognizing Two?

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