Date: September 6, 2016
Source: University of Oxford
New research suggests the
Polynesians, Europeans and the Chinese have had a penchant for black pigs
because of the novelty of their colour. Pigs have played an important cultural
role in Hawaii since Polynesian explorers first brought them to Hawaii 800
years ago. Scientists led by Professor Greger Larson from Oxford examined the
DNA sequences of modern feral Hawaiian pigs and discovered that a novel
mutation is responsible for their black coats, a significant finding because
the pigs were expected to have either the Asian or the European genetic mutation
leading to their black colour. The study in the Royal Society journal,
Open Science, says wild pigs would naturally have camouflaged coats. However,
human societies have independently selected domesticated pigs that express the
trait of black-coloured coats on at least three separate occasions.
Debate has centred on whether
Hawaii's modern feral pigs (modern populations that were once descended from
domestic pigs but are now living in the wild) are from Polynesian stock or
whether they descend primarily from the European domestic pigs that travelled
with explorer Captain Cook who arrived in Hawaii in 1778.
Scientists find that today's
feral pigs ARE mainly the descendants of the Pacific family brought by the
Polynesians. In addition, the scientists identified a new genetic mutation
responsible for the black colouring of their coats. An international team of
researchers studied the mitochondrial DNA and MC1R gene sequences in tissue
samples collected from 57 modern feral Hawaiian pigs. They found a novel
mutation in all the black-coloured pigs which is different to the mutation in
European and Asian domestic pigs with black coats. This finding suggests that
for thousands of years, humans in different parts of the world have been
independently selecting and breeding pigs for their black colour.
Senior author Professor Greger
Larson, from the Palaeogenomics and Bio-Archaeology Research Network at the
University of Oxford, said: 'The first pigs introduced to Hawaii by the
Polynesians were kept as domestic animals. No wild boar have black colours
since natural selection only allows camouflaged pigs to survive long enough to
reproduce. Humans, on the other hand, love all kinds of coloured coats and have
selected for black coats at least three times independently in domestic pigs in
Europe, Asia, and the Pacific. In the case of pigs, black has always been the
new black.'
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