Abstract
AbstractDirekli Cave, located in the Taurus Mountains of southern Turkey, was occupied by Late Epipaleolithic hunters-gatherers for the seasonal hunting and processing of game including large numbers of wild goats. We report genomic data from new and publishedCapraspecimens from Direkli Cave and, supplemented with historic genomes from multipleCapraspecies, find a novel lineage best represented by a ∼14,000 year old 2.59X genome sequenced from specimen Direkli4. This newly discovered Capra lineage is a sister clade to the Caucasian tur species (Capra cylindricornisandCapra caucasica), both now limited to the Caucasus region. We identify genomic regions introgressed in domestic goats with high affinity to Direkli4, and find that West Eurasian domestic goats in the past, but not those today, appear enriched for Direkli4-specific alleles at a genome-wide level. This forgotten “Taurasian tur” likely survived Late Pleistocene climatic change in a Taurus Mountain refugia and its genomic fate is unknown.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference45 articles.
1. Zooarchaeology at Epipaleolithic Direkli Cave, Kahramanmaras, Turkey;Journal of Anatolian Prehistoric Research/Anadolu Prehistorya Araştırmaları Dergisi,2019
2. Late Epipaleolithic hunters of the central Taurus: Faunal remains from Direkli Cave, Kahramanmaraş, Turkey;International Journal of Osteoarchaeology,2012
3. BEAST 2: a software platform for Bayesian evolutionary analysis;PLoS Computational Biology,2014
4. Castelló, J. R. , Huffman, B. , & Groves, C. (2016). Bovids of the World: Antelopes, Gazelles, Cattle, Goats, Sheep, and Relatives (Vol. 104). Princeton University Press.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献