Links  |Sitemap  |  Contact  |  Home  |  中文   |  CAS
 HomeAbout UsResearchScientistsInt`l CooperationNews | Education & TrainingJoin UsPapersResources 
  New Papers
Multimedia
en20131028.jpg
The 5th International Conference on Rodent Biol...
Rodent adaptation and survival under global change
  Th...

Workshop on Phylogenetic comparative methods in...
The 31st IUBS GA and Conference on Biological ...
Special issue of Integrative Zoology: Biologica...
Exploring and integrating cellulolytic systems ...
      More>>
  Location: Home > New Papers
Mitogenomic meta-analysis identifies two phases of migration in the history of eastern Eurasian sheep
[ Update Time: 2015-02-08 ]

Despite much attention, history of sheep (Ovis aries) evolution, including its dating, demographic trajectory and geographic spread, remain controversial. To address these questions, we generated 45 complete and 875 partial mitogenomic sequences, and performed a meta-analysis of these and published ovine mitochondrial sequences (n = 3,229) across Eurasia. We inferred that O. orientalis and O. musimon share the most recent female ancestor with O. aries at c. 0.790 ma (95% CI: 0.637–0.934 ma) during the Middle Pleistocene, substantially predating the domestication event (c. 8–11 ka). By reconstructing historical variations in effective population size, we found evidence of a rapid population increase c. 20–60 ka, immediately before the Last Glacial Maximum. Analyses of lineage expansions showed two sheep migratory waves at c. 4.5–6.8 ka (lineages A and B: ~6.4–6.8 ka; C: ~4.5 ka) across eastern Eurasia, which could have been influenced by prehistoric West-East commercial trade and deliberate mating of domestic and wild sheep, respectively. A continental-scale examination of lineage diversity and approximate Bayesian computation analyses indicated the Mongolian Plateau region was a secondary center of dispersal, acting as a “transportation hub” in eastern Eurasia: sheep from the Middle Eastern domestication center were inferred to have migrated through the Caucasus and Central Asia, and arrived in North and Southwest China (lineages A, B and C) and the Indian Subcontinent (lineages B and C) via this region. Our results provide new insights into sheep domestication, particularly with respect to origins and migrations to and from eastern Eurasia.

http://mbe.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2015/06/16/molbev.msv139.abstract

 
Copyright 1995-2020 INSTITUTE OF ZOOLOGY, CHINESE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
Tel: +86-10-64807098, Fax: +86-10-64807099, Email: ioz@ioz.ac.cn
Address: 1 Beichen West Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100101, P.R.China
Internet Explorer 6.0+, best view with resolution 1024x768