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Agriculture driving male expansion in Neolithic Time

Authors :
Wang, Chuan-Chao
Huang, Yunzhi
Wen, Shao-Qing
Chen, Chun
Jin, Li
Li, Hui
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

The emergence of agriculture is suggested to have driven extensive human population growths. However, genetic evidence from maternal mitochondrial genomes suggests major population expansions began before the emergence of agriculture. Therefore, role of agriculture that played in initial population expansions still remains controversial. Here, we analyzed a set of globally distributed whole Y chromosome and mitochondrial genomes of 526 male samples from 1000 Genome Project. We found that most major paternal lineage expansions coalesced in Neolithic Time. The estimated effective population sizes through time revealed strong evidence for 10- to 100-fold increase in population growth of males with the advent of agriculture. This sex-biased Neolithic expansion might result from the reduction in hunting-related mortality of males.<br />Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1311.6857
Document Type :
Working Paper