While water blasting at a wall of frozen mud in Yukon, Canada, a gold miner made an extraordinary discovery: a perfectly preserved wolf pup that had been locked in permafrost for 57,000 years. The remarkable condition of the pup, named ZhĂčr by the local TrâondĂ«k HwĂ«châin people, gave researchers a wealth of insights about her age, lifestyle, and relationship to modern wolves. The findings appear December 21 in the journal Current Biology.
âSheâs the most complete wolf mummy thatâs ever been found. Sheâs basically 100% intactâall thatâs missing are her eyes,â says first author Julie Meachen, an associate professor of anatomy at Des Moines University. âAnd the fact that sheâs so complete allowed us to do so many lines of inquiry on her to basically reconstruct her life.â
One of the most important questions about ZhĂčr that the researchers sought to answer was how she ended up preserved in permafrost to begin with. It takes a unique combination of circumstances to produce a permafrost mummy.
âItâs rare to find these mummies in the Yukon. The animal has to die in a permafrost location, where the ground is frozen all the time, and they have to get buried very quickly, like any other fossilization process,â says Meachen. âIf it lays out on the frozen tundra too long itâll decompose or get eaten.â
Another important factor is how the wolf died. Animals that die slowly or are hunted by predators are less likely to be found in pristine condition. âWe think she was in her den and died instantaneously by den collapse,â says Meachen. âOur data showed that she didnât starve and was about 7 weeks old when she died, so we feel a bit better knowing the poor little girl didnât suffer for too long.â
In addition to learning how ZhĂčr died, the team were also able to analyze her diet. As it turns out, her diet was heavily influenced by how close she lived to water. âNormally when you think of wolves in the Ice Age, you think of them eating bison or musk oxen or other large animals on land. One thing that surprised us was that she was eating aquatic resources, particularly salmon.â
Analyzing ZhĂčrâs genome also confirmed that she is descended from ancient wolves from Russia, Siberia, and Alaska, who are the ancestors of modern wolves as well. Although analyzing ZhĂčr gave the researchers many answers about wolves of the past, there remain some outstanding questions about ZhĂčr and her family.
âWeâve been asked why she was the only wolf found in the den, and what happened to her mom or siblings,â says Meachen. âIt could be that she was an only pup. Or the other wolves werenât in the den during the collapse. Unfortunately, weâll never know.â
The specimen holds special significance for the local TrâondĂ«k HwĂ«châin people, who have agreed to place ZhĂčr on display at the Yukon Beringia Interpretive Centre in Whitehorse. She is cleaned and conserved so she will stay intact for years to come, allowing her to travel to other Yukon locations as well. And the research team predicts there may be more and more permafrost mummies found in the coming years.
âOne small upside of climate change is that weâre going to find more of these mummies as permafrost melts,â says Meachen. âThatâs a good way for science to reconstruct that time better, but it also shows us how much our planet is actually warming. We really need to be careful.â
Reference: âA mummified Pleistocene gray wolf pupâ by Julie Meachen, Matthew J. Wooller, Benjamin D. Barst, Juliette Funck, Carley Crann, Jess Heath, Molly Cassatt-Johnstone, Beth Shapiro, Elizabeth Hall, Susan Hewitson and Grant Zazula, 21 December 2020, Current Biology.