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An Archaeogenetics Study of Cattle Bones from Seventeenth Century Carnide, Lisbon, Portugal

Authors :
Irene Ureña
Silvia Guimarães
Simon J. M. Davis
Cleia Detry
Gülşah Merve Kılınç
Rute Da Fonseca
Nicolas Dussex
Luciana Simões
Ludmilla Blaschikoff
António Muñoz-Merida
Umberto Albarello
José Matos
Anders Götherström
Ana Elisabete Pires
Catarina Ginja
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Lockwood Press, 2022.

Abstract

Inheritable traits of cattle were modified in various ways at different times by diverse cultures. A large collection of seventeenth century cattle remains excavated from 71 silos in the Largo do Coreto in Carnide, Lisbon, included 47 com- plete and 44 distal ends of metacarpals. These provide an opportunity to make a detailed osteometric and archaeogenetics study. While morphological changes such as size increase, as detected in bone measurements, indicate improvement for larger animals, ancient DNA is useful for studying evolutionary trajectories and modes of improvement of domestic animals. High-throughput sequencing can show evolutionary processes at unprecedented resolution. We generated whole-genome shotgun resequencing data for 6 Carnide specimens on the Illumina HiSeq X Ten platform. Mean en- dogenous DNA content for these samples varied between 1% (CAR008) and 4% (CAR014), and their mitogenomes were sequenced to between 3.56x and 33.44x mean depth of coverage, respectively. The Carnide cattle belong to the Europe- an-T3 (CAR002 and CAR021) and African-T1 haplogroups (CAR008, CAR009, CAR014, and CAR016). These haplogroups are also present in extant native breeds from the Iberian Peninsula, corroborating the hypothesis of a genetic continuity of maternal lineages over time. The admixture of African taurine cattle observed in these specimens from the Modern period supports the idea that current genetic diversity of Iberian cattle derives from the dispersal of a heterogeneous population since early times along the Mediterranean basin. In addition, the biological sex of the Carnide specimens was consistently determined by our genomic analysis and osteometric measurements. Further analyses of whole-genome nuclear data are needed to infer specific biological properties, for example, the coat color of these animals, as well as the variability of genes linked to body size, meat, and milk production traits.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3211f90a16e7d1b42d021a07ec39eb5d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv2n37kdx.19