# Discrimination of ivory from extant and extinct elephant species using Raman spectroscopy: A potential non-destructive technique for combating illegal wildlife trade

**Authors:** Rebecca F. Shepherd, Adrian M. Lister, Alice M. Roberts, Adam M. Taylor, Jemma G. Kerns

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0299689 · PLOS ONE · 2024-04-24

## TL;DR

This study explores using Raman spectroscopy to distinguish between ivory from living and extinct elephant species, offering a non-destructive method to combat illegal wildlife trade.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that Raman spectroscopy can differentiate between ivory from extant and extinct elephant species through chemical analysis.

## Key findings

- Raman spectroscopy can distinguish between mammoth and elephant ivory based on differences in phosphate and amide peak intensity ratios.
- PCA analysis of Raman spectra successfully separated ivory samples into distinct classes based on species.
- Mammoth ivory showed higher crystal maturity compared to living elephant species based on FWHM analysis of phosphate peaks.

## Abstract

The use of elephant ivory as a commodity is a factor in declining elephant populations. Despite recent worldwide elephant ivory trade bans, mammoth ivory trade remains unregulated. This complicates law enforcement efforts, as distinguishing between ivory from extant and extinct species requires costly, destructive and time consuming methods. Elephant and mammoth ivory mainly consists of dentine, a mineralized connective tissue that contains an organic collagenous component and an inorganic component of calcium phosphate minerals, similar in structure to hydroxyapatite crystals. Raman spectroscopy is a non-invasive laser-based technique that has previously been used for the study of bone and mineral chemistry. Ivory and bone have similar biochemical properties, making Raman spectroscopy a promising method for species identification based on ivory. This study aimed to test the hypothesis that it is possible to identify differences in the chemistry of mammoth and elephant ivory using Raman spectroscopy. Mammoth and elephant tusks were obtained from the Natural History Museum in London, UK. Included in this study were eight samples of ivory from Mammuthus primigenius, two samples of carved ivory bangles from Africa (Loxodonta species), and one cross section of a tusk from Elephas maximus. The ivory was scanned using an inVia Raman micro spectrometer equipped with a x50 objective lens and a 785nm laser. Spectra were acquired using line maps and individual spectral points were acquired randomly or at points of interest on all samples. The data was then analysed using principal component analysis (PCA) with use of an in-house MATLAB script. Univariate analysis of peak intensity ratios of phosphate to amide I and III peaks, and carbonate to phosphate peaks showed statistical differences (p<0.0001) in the average peak intensity ratios between Mammuthus primigenius, Loxodonta spp. and Elephas maximus. Full width at half maximum hight (FWHM)analysis of the phosphate peak demonstrated higher crystal maturity of Mammuthus primigenius compared to living elephant species. The results of the study have established that spectra acquired by Raman spectroscopy can be separated into distinct classes through PCA. In conclusion, this study has shown that well-preserved mammoth and elephant ivory has the potential to be characterized using Raman spectroscopy, providing a promising method for species identification. The results of this study will be valuable in developing quick and non-destructive methods for the identification of ivory, which will have direct applications in archaeology and the regulation of international trade.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** calcium phosphate (PubChem CID 24456), hydroxyapatite (PubChem CID 14781)
- **Species:** Mammuthus primigenius (taxon 37349), Loxodonta (taxon 9784), Elephas maximus (taxon 9783)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Elephant (MESH:D016715)
- **Species:** Elephas maximus (Asian elephant, species) [taxon 9783], Mammuthus primigenius (mammoth, species) [taxon 37349], Brosme brosme (tusk, species) [taxon 81638], Loxodonta (African elephants, genus) [taxon 9784]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11042700/full.md

## References

59 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11042700/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11042700