News

Innovative research for sustainable oceans and fisheries,
World-class research institute contributing to national happiness

Press Release

National Institute of Fisheries Science
This is a table provided by the National Fisheries Science Institute.
World’s first genome sequencing of Gangchi, the Dokdo sea lion
Author Research Cooperation Division Date 2025-08-12 Read 948

NIFS said it sequenced the whole genome of Dokdo sea lion (Zalophus japonicus), commonly referred to as Gangchi in Korea that became extinct in the 1970s, and the article was published in the BMC Biology (Springer), the prominent international scientific journal.

The study team sequenced DNA from a total of 16 Dokdo sea lion bone fragments, excavated from Dokdo and Ulleungdo islands in Korea by applying genome-wide SNP analyses. With the application of the next-generation sequencing (NGS), the team succeeded in the whole genome sequencing within the big data (8.4TB) generated by overcoming physical limitations including a small sample numbers and low sequencing depth largely due to the degraded state of all Z. japonicus bone specimens.

maintained its genetic diversity before extinction, which represents the possibility that its extinction was influenced more by anthropogenic impacts than by genetic factors alone.

The article: “Dokdo sea lion Zalophus japonicus genome reveals its evolutionary trajectory before extinction” is of great significance in that it underscored national sovereignty over our endemic biological resources and Dokdo by using the name ‘Dokdo sea lion’ as the title of article. In addition, as the achievement of public-private-academia collaborative research* including researchers from in and out Korea, the article served as an opportunity to demonstrate the technical competency for future industry in Korea such as AI-based advanced bioinformatics. 

*NIFS (Cetacean Research Institute, Biotechnology Research Division), Seoul Grand Park, Genome Research Foundation (GRF), UNIST, AgingLab, and Paleogenomics Laboratory (of European University at Saint Petersburg, Russia) 

The Dokdo sea lion (Z. japonicus) is a marine mammal that thrived in the coastal waters of Korea and went extinct between the 1950s and 1970s due to overhunting conducted during the Japanese colonial period. Its closest relatives are California sea lion (Z. californianus) and Galapagos sea lion (Z. wollebaeki). In the mid-eighteenth century, the estimated population 50,000 inhabited along the coast of Northeast Asia. However, by the 1950s, their number plummeted to just 50, leading to their classification as extinct by the international Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) in 1990. 

 

 


TOP