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Publication | Open Access

Domestication of cattle: Two or three events?

186

Citations

54

References

2018

Year

TLDR

Cattle domestication likely involved two major events—one in the Fertile Crescent producing taurine cattle and another in the Indus Valley producing indicine cattle, though a third event in Egypt has been proposed. We analysed ~54,000 SNPs from 3,196 individuals across 180 populations using approximate Bayesian computation to model population structure, domestication, and demographic dynamics. The two‑event model is strongly supported, with African taurine diversity explained by post‑domestication hybridization with local aurochs, while African indicine share recent ancestry with Asian indicine and gene flow with African taurine; migration between European taurine and Asian indicine is also plausible, underscoring complex human‑mediated dispersal.

Abstract

Cattle have been invaluable for the transition of human society from nomadic hunter-gatherers to sedentary farming communities throughout much of Europe, Asia and Africa since the earliest domestication of cattle more than 10,000 years ago. Although current understanding of relationships among ancestral populations remains limited, domestication of cattle is thought to have occurred on two or three occasions, giving rise to the taurine (Bos taurus) and indicine (Bos indicus) species that share the aurochs (Bos primigenius) as common ancestor ~250,000 years ago. Indicine and taurine cattle were domesticated in the Indus Valley and Fertile Crescent, respectively; however, an additional domestication event for taurine in the Western Desert of Egypt has also been proposed. We analysed medium density Illumina Bovine SNP array (~54,000 loci) data across 3,196 individuals, representing 180 taurine and indicine populations to investigate population structure within and between populations, and domestication and demographic dynamics using approximate Bayesian computation (ABC). Comparative analyses between scenarios modelling two and three domestication events consistently favour a model with only two episodes and suggest that the additional genetic variation component usually detected in African taurine cattle may be explained by hybridization with local aurochs in Africa after the domestication of taurine cattle in the Fertile Crescent. African indicine cattle exhibit high levels of shared genetic variation with Asian indicine cattle due to their recent divergence and with African taurine cattle through relatively recent gene flow. Scenarios with unidirectional or bidirectional migratory events between European taurine and Asian indicine cattle are also plausible, although further studies are needed to disentangle the complex human-mediated dispersion patterns of domestic cattle. This study therefore helps to clarify the effect of past demographic history on the genetic variation of modern cattle, providing a basis for further analyses exploring alternative migratory routes for early domestic populations.

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