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Australian scientists use imaging to map the brain of the extinct Tasmanian tiger

Study shows it’s possible to reconstruct pathways in brains that are more than a century old

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The last known Tasmanian tiger, seen in 1936, the year it died in a Hobart zoo. Photo: Tasmanian Museum

By Kim Arlington

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Eighty years after the last Tasmanian tiger died, scientists have used imaging techniques to map the marsupial’s brain for the first time.

The Tasmanian tiger, or thylacine, was elusive before its extinction and its behaviour in the wild was never scientifically documented.

But a reconstruction of its brain architecture and neural networks suggests it had more cortex devoted to action planning and possibly even decision making than its closest living relative, the Tasmanian devil.

The findings, published in PLOS ONE on Thursday, are consistent with the tiger’s more complex ecological role as a predator, while the devil survives mainly by scavenging.
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