Ancient mitochondrial DNA analysis reveals complexity of indigenous North American turkey domestication
Although the cultural and nutritive importance of the turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) to precontact Native Americans and contemporary people worldwide is clear, little is known about the domestication of this bird compared to other domesticates. Mitochondrial DNA analysis of 149 turkey bones and 29 cop...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2010-02, Vol.107 (7), p.2807-2812 |
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creator | Speller, Camilla F Kemp, Brian M Wyatt, Scott D Monroe, Cara Lipe, William D Arndt, Ursula M Yang, Dongya Y |
description | Although the cultural and nutritive importance of the turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) to precontact Native Americans and contemporary people worldwide is clear, little is known about the domestication of this bird compared to other domesticates. Mitochondrial DNA analysis of 149 turkey bones and 29 coprolites from 38 archaeological sites (200 BC-AD 1800) reveals a unique domesticated breed in the precontact Southwestern United States. Phylogeographic analyses indicate that this domestic breed originated from outside the region, but rules out the South Mexican domestic turkey (Meleagris gallopavo gallopavo) as a progenitor. A strong genetic bottleneck within the Southwest turkeys also reflects intensive human selection and breeding. This study points to at least two occurrences of turkey domestication in precontact North America and illuminates the intensity and sophistication of New World animal breeding practices. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1073/pnas.0909724107 |
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Mitochondrial DNA analysis of 149 turkey bones and 29 coprolites from 38 archaeological sites (200 BC-AD 1800) reveals a unique domesticated breed in the precontact Southwestern United States. Phylogeographic analyses indicate that this domestic breed originated from outside the region, but rules out the South Mexican domestic turkey (Meleagris gallopavo gallopavo) as a progenitor. A strong genetic bottleneck within the Southwest turkeys also reflects intensive human selection and breeding. 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Mitochondrial DNA analysis of 149 turkey bones and 29 coprolites from 38 archaeological sites (200 BC-AD 1800) reveals a unique domesticated breed in the precontact Southwestern United States. Phylogeographic analyses indicate that this domestic breed originated from outside the region, but rules out the South Mexican domestic turkey (Meleagris gallopavo gallopavo) as a progenitor. A strong genetic bottleneck within the Southwest turkeys also reflects intensive human selection and breeding. 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subjects | Animal domestication Animal genetics Animals Animals, Domestic - genetics Archaeological sites archaeology Base Sequence Biological Sciences Birds Bone and Bones - chemistry Bones Breeding - methods Breeding of animals Cluster Analysis Demography DNA DNA Primers - genetics DNA, Mitochondrial - genetics domestication Feces - chemistry Fossils Founder Effect Genetics Geography Haplotypes Humans Meleagris gallopavo Mitochondria Mitochondrial DNA Molecular Sequence Data nucleotide sequences Phylogeny phylogeography Sequence Analysis, DNA Social Sciences Southwestern United States species differences Species Specificity Turkeys Turkeys - genetics Wild birds Wildfowl |
title | Ancient mitochondrial DNA analysis reveals complexity of indigenous North American turkey domestication |
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