| This article requires expansion. Please help. Though not a stub by pure word count, this article lacks depth of content. | Artist's depiction Part of RationalWiki's Cryptid Petting Zoo Hiding with Schrödinger's cat * Dragon * Ameranthropoides loysi * Bunyip * Leviathan * Basilosaurus * Giant * List of prominent alien species * Hoop snake * Cryptozoology * 龙 * Michael A. Woodley of Menie * Tom DeLonge v \- t \- e The thylacine (Thylacinus cynocephalus), more commonly known as the Tasmanian wolf or Tasmanian tiger, was the largest modern marsupial carnivore until it went extinct in 1936.[1] Thylacines first evolved around 23 million years ago[2] and had become practically marsupial dogs[note 1], both having adapted to similar niches. In their prime, thylacines were the apex predators of New Guinea, Australia, and Tasmania, although Tasmanian devils likely preyed on their young.[3] More than 4000 years ago, Asian traders introduced dingoes to Australia.[4]. Dingoes and thylacines occupied different ecological niches (like the opossum eating in your trash can live in harmony with the raccoon also eating from your trash), but apparently shared diseases,[5] and thylacines became extinct on mainland Australia. A population persisted on Tasmania, but hunting continued, and in 1936, the species became extinct. ## Contents * 1 Cryptozoology * 2 Cloning and genetics * 3 Gallery * 4 See also * 5 Notes * 6 References ## Cryptozoology[edit] Despite its extinction, some 3800 unconfirmed sightings of the thylacine have been reported.[6] In addition, there are the usual dubious photographs and government funded searches that turn up nothing.[7][8] Some sightings apparently even come from mainland Australia and New Guinea,[9][10] where thylacines have been extinct for literally thousands of years.[11] ## Cloning and genetics[edit] In 1999, a project to clone the thylacine began, and even claimed a breakthrough.[12] Unfortunately, the project was canceled in 2005.[13] Some work has been done since on thylacine genetics, including the sequencing of the thylacine mitochondrial genome, and possibly getting the nuclear genome for $1 million.[14] ## Gallery[edit] * The last captive thylacine * Compilation of all known videos of captive thylacines * Rock art of a thylacine in Ubirr, Northern Territory, Australia ## See also[edit] * Convergent evolution ## Notes[edit] 1. ↑ Richard Dawkins once said in The Ancestor's Tale "...the skeleton [of a thylacine] is harder to distinguish [from a dog]. Zoology students at Oxford had to identify 100 zoological specimens as part of the final exam. Word soon got around that, if ever a 'dog' skull was given, it was safe to identify it as Thylacinus on the grounds that anything as obvious as a dog skull had to be a catch." ## References[edit] 1. ↑ ICUN on Tylacinus cynocephalus 2. ↑ See the Wikipedia article on Nimbacinus dicksoni. 3. ↑ Australian Museum: The Thylacine 4. ↑ Mitochondrial DNA data indicate an introduction through Mainland Southeast Asia for Australian dingoes and Polynesian domestic dogs 5. ↑ Lauren C. White; Frédérik Saltré; Corey J. A. Bradshaw; Jeremy J. Austin (2018). "High-quality fossil dates support a synchronous, Late Holocene extinction of devils and thylacines in mainland Australia". Biology Letters. 14 (1): 20170642. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2017.0642. PMC 5803592 Freely accessible. PMID 29343562. 6. ↑ Australian Rare Fauna Research Association FAQ 7. ↑ The Sydney Morning Herald:Tourist claims to have snapped Tasmanian tiger 8. ↑ The Sydney Morning Herald:Mystery that burns so bright 9. ↑ The Cryptid Zoo:Thyacine 10. ↑ Scientists investigate Tasmanian tiger sightings by Mindy Weisberger (March 31, 2017, 1:25 PM) CBS News. 11. ↑ Paddle, Robert (2000). The Last Tasmanian Tiger: the History and Extinction of the Thylacine. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-53154-2 12. ↑ The Guardian:Back from the dead 13. ↑ ABC News Online: Museum ditches thylacine cloning project via the Wayback Machine 14. ↑ NCBI:The mitochondrial genome sequence of the Tasmanian tiger (Thylacinus cynocephalus) v \- t \- e Articles about all things Down Under Political parties: | Socialist Alliance • One Nation • National Party of Australia • Australian Greens • Christian Democratic Party (The Fred Nile Group) • Shooters and Fishers Party • Rise Up Australia Party • Palmer United Party • Party For Freedom (Australia) • Liberal Party of Australia • Australian Labor Party • The New Liberals • Political movements: | United Patriots Front • Australian Defence League • Reclaim Australia • Australian Vaccination-risks Network • Australian Christian Lobby • Institute of Public Affairs • Politicians: | Julia Gillard • Fred Nile • Pauline Hanson • Ann Bressington • Tony Abbott • Jacqui Lambie • Jim Saleam • Malcolm Turnbull • Bill Shorten • Richard Di Natale • Malcolm Roberts • Nick Xenophon • Scott Morrison • Fraser Anning • Scott Ludlam • Government policies: | Carbon tax (Australia) • VLAD laws • Media outlets: | Truth News Australia • Australian Broadcasting Corporation • The Juice Media • Sky News Australia • The Spectator • Personalities and pundits: | Andrew Snelling • Andrew Bolt • Judy Carman • Pete Evans • Jarrah White • Ian Plimer • Tim Flannery • Joanne Nova • John Safran • Sheik Feiz Muhammad • Gina Rinehart • The Great Aussie Patriot • Rupert Murdoch • Jonathan Sarfati • John Mackay • Greg Taylor • Peter Singer • SyrianGirl • Julian Assange • AJ Miller • Raphael Lataster • Amitakh Stanford • Peter Tatchell • Carl Wieland • Alan O'Reilly • Germaine Greer • Blair Cottrell • Neil Erikson • Mohammad Tawhidi • Ken Ham • Bill Muehlenberg • Michael Denton • Scott Ludlam • Stephen E. Jones • Larry Pickering •