Widespread Origins of Domestic Horse Lineages

Author:

Vilà Carles1,Leonard Jennifer A.2,Götherström Anders3,Marklund Stefan4,Sandberg Kaj4,Lidén Kerstin3,Wayne Robert K.2,Ellegren Hans1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Evolutionary Biology, Uppsala University, Norbyvägen 18D, S-75236 Uppsala, Sweden.

2. Department of Organismic Biology, Ecology and Evolution, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095–1606, USA.

3. Archeological Research Laboratory, Stockholm University, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.

4. Department of Animal Breeding and Genetics, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, S-75007 Uppsala, Sweden.

Abstract

Domestication entails control of wild species and is generally regarded as a complex process confined to a restricted area and culture. Previous DNA sequence analyses of several domestic species have suggested only a limited number of origination events. We analyzed mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region sequences of 191 domestic horses and found a high diversity of matrilines. Sequence analysis of equids from archaeological sites and late Pleistocene deposits showed that this diversity was not due to an accelerated mutation rate or an ancient domestication event. Consequently, high mtDNA sequence diversity of horses implies an unprecedented and widespread integration of matrilines and an extensive utilization and taming of wild horses. However, genetic variation at nuclear markers is partitioned among horse breeds and may reflect sex-biased dispersal and breeding.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference39 articles.

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3. D. W. Anthony in Horses Through Time S. L. Olsen Ed. (Roberts Rinehart for Carnegie Museum of Natural History Boulder CO 1996) pp. 57–82.

4. J. Clutton-Brock A Natural History of Domesticated Mammals (Cambridge Univ. Press Cambridge ed. 2 1999).

5. Bennett D., Hoffmann R. S., Mamm. Species 628, 1 (1999).

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