Morphological and genetic evidence for early Holocene cattle management in northeastern China

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DOI

  • Hucai Zhang
    Yunnan Normal University
  • Johanna L.A. Paijmans
    University of Potsdam
  • Fengqin Chang
    Yunnan Normal University
  • Xiaohong Wu
    Peking University
  • Guangjie Chen
    Yunnan Normal University
  • Chuzhao Lei
    Northwest A&F University
  • Xiujuan Yang
    Museum of Heilongjiang Province
  • Zhenyi Wei
    Museum of Heilongjiang Province
  • Daniel G. Bradley
    Trinity College Dublin
  • Ludovic Orlando
    Natural History Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen
  • Terry O’Connor
    University of York
  • Michael Hofreiter
    University of Potsdam
The domestication of cattle is generally accepted to have taken place in two independent centres: around 10,500 years ago in the Near East, giving rise to modern taurine cattle, and two millennia later in southern Asia, giving rise to zebu cattle. Here we provide firmly dated morphological and genetic evidence for early Holocene management of taurine cattle in northeastern China. We describe conjoining mandibles from this region that show evidence of oral stereotypy, dated to the early Holocene by two independent 14C dates. Using Illumina high-throughput sequencing coupled with DNA hybridization capture, we characterize 15,406 bp of the mitogenome with on average 16.7-fold coverage. Phylogenetic analyses reveal a hitherto unknown mitochondrial haplogroup that falls outside the known taurine diversity. Our data suggest that the first attempts to manage cattle in northern China predate the introduction of domestic cattle that gave rise to the current stock by several thousand years.

Keywords

  • Biological sciences, Evolution, Palaeontology
Original languageUnknown
Article number2755
JournalNature Communications
Volume4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 8 Nov 2013
Externally publishedYes
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