CSIRO scientists have mapped the first full genome of the spotted handfish, a step which could aid monitoring, captive breeding and conservation efforts of the critically endangered species. Fewer than 2,000 spotted handfish remain in the wild. Dr Tom Walsh, co-lead of CSIRO’s applied genomics initiative, said the genome can provide a better understanding of the species. “What we don’t want is for all our endangered species to only exist as genomes,” he said. “The conservation has to happen on the ground. What the genome can do is provide more information to those people making those decisions.”
More Stories
Russian scientist held in Ice jail charged with smuggling frog embryos into US
Trump agrees deal for UAE to build largest AI campus outside US
The Cybertruck was supposed to be apocalypse-proof. Can it even survive a trip to the grocery store?