Date: June 2, 2016
Source: University of Oxford
The question, 'Where do domestic
dogs come from?', has vexed scholars for a very long time. Some argue that humans
first domesticated wolves in Europe, while others claim this happened in
Central Asia or China. A new paper, published in Science, suggests that
all these claims may be right. Supported by funding from the European Research
Council and the Natural Environment Research Council, a large international
team of scientists compared genetic data with existing archaeological evidence
and show that man's best friend may have emerged independently from two
separate (possibly now extinct) wolf populations that lived on opposite sides
of the Eurasian continent. This means that dogs may have been domesticated not
once, as widely believed, but twice.
A major international research
project on dog domestication, led by the University of Oxford, has
reconstructed the evolutionary history of dogs by first sequencing the genome
(at Trinity College Dublin) of a 4,800-year old medium-sized dog from bone
excavated at the Neolithic Passage Tomb of Newgrange, Ireland. The team
(including French researchers based in Lyon and at the National Museum of
Natural History in Paris) also obtained mitochondrial DNA from 59 ancient dogs
living between 14,000 to 3,000 years ago and then compared them with the
genetic signatures of more than 2,500 previously studied modern dogs.
The results of their analyses
demonstrate a genetic separation between modern dog populations currently
living in East Asia and Europe. Curiously, this population split seems to have
taken place after the earliest archaeological evidence for dogs in Europe. The
new genetic evidence also shows a population turnover in Europe that appears to
have mostly replaced the earliest domestic dog population there, which supports
the evidence that there was a later arrival of dogs from elsewhere. Lastly, a
review of the archaeological record shows that early dogs appear in both the
East and West more than 12,000 years ago, but in Central Asia no earlier than
8,000 years ago.
Combined, these new findings
suggest that dogs were first domesticated from geographically separated wolf populations
on opposite sides of the Eurasian continent. At some point after their
domestication, the eastern dogs dispersed with migrating humans into Europe
where they mixed with and mostly replaced the earliest European dogs. Most dogs
today are a mixture of both Eastern and Western dogs -- one reason why previous
genetic studies have been difficult to interpret.
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