2014
DOI: 10.3390/d6010178
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Meta-Analysis of Mitochondrial DNA Reveals Several Population Bottlenecks during Worldwide Migrations of Cattle

Abstract: Several studies have investigated the differentiation of mitochondrial DNA in Eurasian, African and American cattle as well as archaeological bovine material. A global survey of these studies shows that haplogroup distributions are more stable in time than in space. All major migrations of cattle have shifted the haplogroup distributions considerably with a reduction of the number of haplogroups and/or an expansion of haplotypes that are rare or absent in the ancestral populations. The most extreme case is the… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(55 citation statements)
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“…Lineages would then be lost through successive colonization events, resulting in reduced diversity in derived populations at a distance from the source. The geographical distribution of taurine mtDNA haplogroups, whereby European diversity is a subsample of the diversity encountered in the Near East, supports the hypothesis that European cattle are a derivative of the Near Eastern Neolithic complex (Troy et al, 2001;Lenstra et al, 2014). This is supported by archaeological evidence and indicates that B. taurus domesticates migrated from the Near East with nomadic pastoralists into central and northern Europe following the Danubian route, finally reaching western Europe and Britain around 6,000 cal.…”
Section: Mitochondrial Dna Sequence Diversity Reveals the Complex Ancmentioning
confidence: 52%
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“…Lineages would then be lost through successive colonization events, resulting in reduced diversity in derived populations at a distance from the source. The geographical distribution of taurine mtDNA haplogroups, whereby European diversity is a subsample of the diversity encountered in the Near East, supports the hypothesis that European cattle are a derivative of the Near Eastern Neolithic complex (Troy et al, 2001;Lenstra et al, 2014). This is supported by archaeological evidence and indicates that B. taurus domesticates migrated from the Near East with nomadic pastoralists into central and northern Europe following the Danubian route, finally reaching western Europe and Britain around 6,000 cal.…”
Section: Mitochondrial Dna Sequence Diversity Reveals the Complex Ancmentioning
confidence: 52%
“…Haplogroup T1 almost exclusively describes African mtDNA diversity and is found only at low frequencies elsewhere; in Africa, non-T1 haplogroups have been reported only in Egyptian and northwest African populations (Troy et al, 2001;Lenstra et al, 2014). The over-representation of the T1 haplogroup in Africa has been cited as evidence for the separate domestication of the founding populations of the African continent, as previously proposed by archaeological data (Stock and Gifford-Gonzalez, 2013).…”
Section: Mitochondrial Dna Sequence Diversity Reveals the Complex Ancmentioning
confidence: 89%
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