{"id":203955,"date":"2017-07-07T01:47:18","date_gmt":"2017-07-07T05:47:18","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/dna-evidence-is-rewriting-domestication-origin-stories-science-news-magazine\/"},"modified":"2017-07-07T01:47:18","modified_gmt":"2017-07-07T05:47:18","slug":"dna-evidence-is-rewriting-domestication-origin-stories-science-news-magazine","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/transhuman-news-blog\/dna\/dna-evidence-is-rewriting-domestication-origin-stories-science-news-magazine\/","title":{"rendered":"DNA evidence is rewriting domestication origin stories &#8211; Science News Magazine"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>      One lab full      of rats looks pretty much the same as another. But visiting a      lab in Siberia, geneticist Alex Cagan can distinguish rats      bred to be tame from those bred to be aggressive as soon as      he opens the lab door.    <\/p>\n<p>      Its a completely different response immediately, he says.      All of the tame rats come to the front of the cage very      inquisitively. The aggressive rats scurry to the backs of      their cages to hide. Exactly how 70 generations      of breeding have ingrained friendly or hostile behaviors      in the rats DNA is a mystery that domestication researchers      are trying to solve. The rats, along with mink and silver      foxes, are part of a long-running study at the Institute of      Cytology and Genetics in Novosibirsk, Russia. The aim is to      replay domestication to determine the genetic underpinnings      that set domesticated animals apart from their wild      ancestors.    <\/p>\n<p>        Over thousands of years, humans have found ways to put        other species to work, from spinning silk to storing water.        These short stories reveal how humans got to know some of        their closest companions.      <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>      For thousands of years, humans have lived with animals. Some      of the creatures are companions  hopping onto laps, ready to      play fetch. Some have jobs  carrying heavy loads, pulling      wagons and plows, and herding other animals. Others provide      meat, eggs or milk. Plants, too, have been tamed. On nearly      every continent, fruits, vegetables, grains, nuts and tubers      stand in soldier-straight rows and yield bounty on schedule.    <\/p>\n<p>      There was a time when the species that now inhabit humans      homes, fields and barnyards didnt exist. Then some people,      somewhere, brought wild things under human control. Or the      wild creatures exploited new ecological niches created by      humans, gradually habituating themselves to people and, in      essence, domesticating themselves. Both paths  scientists      are still debating which was more likely for different      animals  led to the creation of domesticated species or      subspecies genetically distinct from their wild ancestors.    <\/p>\n<p>      Scientists studying evolution and human history want to      know how ancient people domesticated animals and plants.      What species did humans start with and where did it happen      first? How long did it take? Does one group get credit for      taming wild horses or subjugating aurochs into milk-giving      cows? Or did multiple people in different places have the      same idea?    <\/p>\n<p>      Even for dogs, humans oldest, closest friends, all those      things are unknown, says evolutionary geneticist Greger      Larson of the University of Oxford. For many domesticated      creatures, the questions outweigh the answers. As new studies      flood in  some based on archaeology, others on modern or      ancient DNA  the waters get muddy, with one studys results      contradicting anothers.    <\/p>\n<p>      Domestication research right now is really going through an      exciting phase, Larson says. Comparing the genetic      instruction books, or genomes, of wild and domesticated      species is giving evolutionary geneticists fresh clues about      the changes that separate domesticated species from wild      ones. New techniques (some developed      in the last two to three years) for analyzing fragile DNA      from ancient bones offer genetic snapshots of domestication      as it played out long ago. Marrying that DNA data with      archaeological findings, the context in which the bones were      discovered, for example, may tell researchers more about      when, where and how humans first engaged with plants and      animals. Recent results are already rewriting the stories of      rice, horse and chicken domestication.    <\/p>\n<p>      A new hypothesis is also shining a light on core changes in      the embryos of many domesticated species. The hypothesis aims      to explain how the process of becoming close to people      produces comparable changes in the appearance, reproduction      and physiology of a whole range of domesticated animals. One      central developmental change  in a temporary clump of cells      called the neural crest  may be behind the suite of      characteristics known as domestication syndrome.    <\/p>\n<p>      The pace of research, much of it seemingly contradictory,      will only increase in the near future, Larson predicts.      Were going to get a lot more confused before we figure out      whats really going on.    <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>      Deciding when an animal can be called domesticated isnt      always easy.    <\/p>\n<p>      Since 2002, Anna Kukekova has been making annual treks to      Novosibirsk. A geneticist at the University of Illinois at      Urbana-Champaign, she travels to Siberia each year to collect      blood from hundreds of silver foxes to look for genetic      changes that produce tame and aggressive behaviors.    <\/p>\n<p>      These foxes are special. They are part of a long-running      biological experiment to repeat domestication by turning a      wild canid  from the family of animals including wolves,      foxes, jackals and dogs  into a fox version of a domestic      dog (SN:      5\/13\/17, p. 29). The project was the brainchild of      geneticist Dmitry Belyaev. In the 1950s, Belyaev and      colleagues started selecting and breeding the least      aggressive and fearful silver foxes from those on a fur farm.      Since 1960, researcher Lyudmila Trut and her team have      selected the farms friendliest foxes to breed. Over more      than 60 generations, the foxes have grown more and more      tolerant of humans. Kukekova says shes noticed a difference      even in the 15 years shes been visiting the farm.    <\/p>\n<p>        In China, people began domesticating the larvae of silk        moths for the fine, strong threads of their cocoons as        early as 7,500 years ago, genetic evidence suggests. People        bred the larvae to produce more silk and to tolerate human        handling and extreme crowding (SN        Online: 8\/27\/09). For more than 2,000 years, the        Chinese         kept their silk-making methods top secret, and        smuggling silkworms out of the country was punishable by        death. Silk makers         traded their monopolized fabric throughout Eurasia        along the Silk Road (SN:5\/27\/17,        p. 4). To this day, the only other insect that is        domesticated is the honeybee. Erika Engelhaupt      <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>      In Kukekovas early visits, about       70 percent of the tame foxes were considered elite,      aquiver with excitement when people came around. The rest of      the tame ones didnt mind if you petted them, but they      werent super excited to interact with you, she says. Now,      almost every tame fox is in the super-friendly elite group.      (Foxes bred to be aggressive, on the other hand, are      definitely not happy to have people around, much like the      fearful rats Cagan encountered at the institute.)    <\/p>\n<p>      Even though the friendly Novosibirsk foxes are genetically      tame  some are sold as pets  not everyone would call the      animals domesticated. In an apartment, they would probably      be very difficult pets, Kukekova says. The foxes have a      strong odor, are more active at night and they arent easily      house-trained. The combination of living with people plus      inherited changes in the foxes genomes may eventually make      them fully domesticated, but they arent there yet.    <\/p>\n<p>      Researchers       have set out several biological criteria that should      determine when silver foxes, or other animals, cross the line      that divides merely tame from fully domesticated. Number one:      Domesticated animals are genetically distinct from their wild      forebears, and they inherit their human-friendly demeanor.      Thats different from wild animals that have been tamed but      dont pass on that tameness to the next generation.    <\/p>\n<p>      Two: Domestication makes animals dependent on humans for food      and, for the most part, reproduction. Three: Breeding with      wild counterparts becomes difficult, if not impossible. For      example, domesticated plants dont drop their seeds when      ripe; they rely on humans to spread their progeny. Finally,      domesticated animals and plants should bear the physical      hallmarks of domestication syndrome, such as a smaller skull      for animals, and a narrower footprint for plants.    <\/p>\n<p>      By these criteria, some people argue that cats  popular pets      worldwide  are not fully domesticated. Cats probably            started taming themselves about 9,500 years ago by      hunting vermin, infesting early farmers grain stores and      feasting on food scraps. Farmers brought the mousers with      them from the Middle East into Europe around 6,400 years ago,      researchers      reported June 19 in Nature Ecology &      Evolution (SN      Online: 06\/19\/17). But cats may not have been      purring lap pets at that time, say molecular biologists      Thierry Grange and Eva-Maria Geigl of the Institute Jacques      Monod in Paris. That behavioral transformation may have      happened later, perhaps in Egyptian cats that were quickly      dispersed by boat around the ancient world.    <\/p>\n<p>      In fact, cats havent changed much physically or genetically      from their African wildcat ancestors (Felis silvestris      lybica), Grange and Geigl say. Many felines still choose      their own mates and hunt for food. Cats famed aloofness            may be another clue that their domestication isnt fully      complete. Certainly, cats are more like their wild ancestors      than dogs are, says Grange. But modern kitties are no longer      wild cats, Geigl argues: These couch potatoes are      domesticated.    <\/p>\n<p>        Dogs appear to have been the first species domesticated by        humans, followed by many others in Asia and the Middle        East. As people spread to the New World, they continued to        domesticate animals. Some were domesticated more than once        in different locations.      <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>        Sources: D.E. MacHugh et al\/Annu. Rev.        Anim. Biosci. 2017; M. Germonpr et al\/J.        Archaeol. Sci. 2009      <\/p>\n<p>      Bonds between humans and their animal companions may be more      important than rigid biological criteria, Larson and other      researchers argue. Domestication, says zooarchaeologist Alan      Outram of the University of Exeter in England, is best      looked at with a more cultural definition.    <\/p>\n<p>      Domestication is a gray area encompassing the point at which      a hunter stops being interested in simply killing and eating      an animal and starts being interested in controlling the      animal, Outram says. The process probably starts slowly,      first with animal herding and other forms of husbandry, such      as controlling an animals food supply and movement, culling      at specific ages and directing breeding. When people start      using animals, such as horses, for labor, riding or milking      (fermented horse milk       is a staple in parts of Central Asia), the animals start      moving to being culturally domestic, he says.    <\/p>\n<p>        Many domestication stories have vague beginnings, but we        know exactly when the Syrian golden hamster, now a popular        pet, first came under human control. On April 12, 1930,        zoologist Israel Aharoni         had workers dig up a mother hamster and her 11 babies        spied by a farmer in his wheat field near Aleppo, Syria.        Aharoni         wanted a convenient animal to rear in the laboratory,        but the creatures were so easily tamed that breeders began        selling them as pets. Now, more than a million hamsters,        descended from that first litter, run in wheels and        transparent balls in homes across the United States.        Erika Engelhaupt      <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>      Outram has evidence that the Botai people, hunter-gatherers      that lived in Central Asia, were milking and bridling horses      about 5,500 years ago (SN:      3\/28\/09, p. 15). I certainly wouldnt want to make      the argument that at the Botai time youve got anything like      modern domesticated horses, he says. It was more like      equine husbandry and herding.    <\/p>\n<p>      Scientists have to be careful not to judge how domestication      happened in the past by the way animals are treated in modern      Western cultures, says evolutionary biologist Ludovic Orlando      of the University of Copenhagen. On a trip to collect DNA      samples from ancient horse bones in Mongolia, Orlando got a      whole new perspective on domestication.    <\/p>\n<p>      It completely changed my view of horse domestication,      because I saw people interacting with this animal in ways I      couldnt imagine myself, Orlando says. In Mongolia, horses      roam free and their owners catch them, as needed, for riding      or milking. Once youve seen that, you cant think that      domestication is just about parking animals somewhere. Its      about the process of interacting with them and developing a      relationship with them.    <\/p>\n<p>      If its hard to pinpoint what domestication means in foxes      tamed in controlled experiments, consider how difficult it is      to decide whether the bones of a long-dead animal are from a      wild or domesticated critter. Thats the task of      paleontologist Mietje Germonpr of the Royal Belgian      Institute of Natural Sciences in Brussels, who studies dog      domestication. The beloved pets are the subjects of much      domestication research.    <\/p>\n<p>      Scientists used to think that dogs were domesticated toward      the end of the Ice Age, about 14,000 years ago (SN      Online: 7\/22\/10). Germonpr and colleagues have      studied skulls and jawbones of even more ancient canids in      caves and other places where Ice Age people lived more than      25,000 years ago. One skull, found in a Goyet cave in      Belgium, may be one of the oldest dogs ever discovered  or      at least the oldest wolf that looked like a dog. At 36,000      years old, the Goyet pooch pushed dog domestication back to      well before glaciers reached their peak coverage of the      Northern Hemisphere.    <\/p>\n<p>      Those early dogs may have been used as pack animals to move      mammoth carcasses from hunting grounds to living quarters,      says Germonpr. Big dogs may have helped humans hunt      dangerous carnivores, such as cave bears, hyenas and cave      lions. Its also possible the animals       were used for fur or meat.    <\/p>\n<p>        The ancestor of todays enormous, fleshy sweet watermelons        was a surprisingly small, hard and bitter melon with pale        green flesh. Just where this fruit was first grown is        debatedall thats agreed on is that it         was somewhere in Africa. An image of a watermelon        appears in an Egyptian tomb dating to at least 4,000 years        ago, and five watermelon seeds were found in King Tuts        tomb. Its thought that the Egyptians bred the fruit as a        tasty, and portable, water supply. Erika        Engelhaupt      <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>      Germonprs assertion that the Goyet dog is in fact a dog      comes from comparing its skull and jaws with those of wolves      and modern dogs. Most domesticated mammals, including dogs,      tend to have smaller bodies than their wild counterparts,      with smaller skulls that have shorter, wider snouts and      shorter, lower jaws. Those features make adult dogs look more      puppylike than grown wolves do. That type of facial      remodeling is part of the domestication syndrome, which also      includes curly tails, floppy ears and other characteristics      common among domesticated animals but not wild ones. By      Germonprs measurements, the Goyet skull more closely      resembles modern dogs than it does ancient or modern wolves.    <\/p>\n<p>      She also has evidence of early dogs in       Russia and       the Czech Republic dating to 25,000 years ago or more.      Other groups have reported data suggesting that       a 33,000-year-old canid from the Altai Mountains of      Russia was also an early dog.    <\/p>\n<p>      Other researchers disagree, saying the animals were really      wolves. Three-dimensional      reconstructions of the skulls of the Goyet dog and      another Ice Age dog show that the animals snouts didnt      angle from the skull the way modern dogs do, and the ancient      versions didnt have some other features of modern dogs      (SN      Online: 2\/5\/15).    <\/p>\n<p>      Larson says hes not bothered that the Goyet hound didnt      physically measure up in the 3-D study. The canid may have      behaved very much like a dog and had close ties to humans.      Those early dogs didnt have thousands of years of intense      breeding selection to sculpt them into the image of modern      dogs. Even modern dogs have been transformed dramatically in      just 200 to 300 years of breeding (SN      Online: 4\/26\/17;       SN:1\/31\/09, p. 26). What was a dog 15,000 to      30,000 years ago is not what a dog is now, Larson says.    <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>      The timing of Fidos taming isnt the only dispute.      Researchers also wrangle over where and how many times it      happened. Dueling genetic studies based on the DNA of modern      dogs and wolves suggest the fellowship between humans and      dogs could have been forged in the Middle      East,       Central Asia, East      Asia or, as Goyets archaeological evidence suggests, in            Europe. Research reported by Larson and colleagues last      year in Science suggests that dog domestication      happened      at least twice, once in Europe and once in East Asia      (SN:      7\/9\/16, p. 15).    <\/p>\n<p>      DNA evidence indicates that the Goyet dog and the      33,000-year-old Russian dog are not the ancestors of todays      dogs or wolves (SN:      12\/14\/13, p. 6). Scientists examined mitochondrial      DNA, which is passed from mothers to offspring, to trace      maternal lineages of ancient and modern dogs and wolves. The      mitochondrial DNA of the Goyet and Russian dogs belongs      to a maternal lineage that didnt leave any modern      descendants, researchers reported in Science in      2013. But it doesnt mean the animals werent on the way      toward being domesticated, Germonpr says.    <\/p>\n<p>      Perhaps those dogs were part of an early, failed attempt at      domestication, she says. The domesticated animals became      extinct, and domestication started up again somewhere else.    <\/p>\n<p>      Locating the cradle of most species domestication is      difficult. Many were domesticated before writing was even      invented. So scientists have to extract the story from      artifacts and bones or from DNA.    <\/p>\n<p>      The origin of Asian rice has been hotly      debated for many years. Scientists used to think modern      rice, Oryza sativa, was domesticated twice: sticky,      short-grained japonica rice was domesticated in      China, and in India, rice was domesticated into long-grained      varieties indica and aus. Archaeological      finds suggest that rice cultivation started about 9,000 years      ago in China and 8,000 years ago in India. But true      domestication probably happened only once  in China, says      Dorian Fuller, an archaeobotanist at University College      London.    <\/p>\n<p>      People were certainly cultivating rice in India, but thats      just one step in the domestication process. The final      threshold that separates a fully domesticated crop from a      cultivated one is that domesticated plants require human      intervention to spread their seeds, Fuller says. Wild grains,      for instance, shatter their seed heads when ripe. But      domesticated grains, including rice, wheat, barley, sorghum      and millet, have mutations that prevent shattering. The            only way the grain crops can propagate is if humans      collect and plant the seeds.    <\/p>\n<p>        Though the Inca built great cities and had a sophisticated        understanding of astronomy, they didnt use wheels to        transport goods. Instead, llamas carried the heavy loads        along the empires vast road system. And llama dung        fertilized Inca fields, possibly helping to grow maize at        high altitudes. South Americas llamas and alpacas are        domesticated versions of         two wild camel species: guanaco (ancestor of llamas)        and the smaller vicua (alpacas ancestor). The earliest        evidence of the animals domestication is from bones found        at archaeological sites in the Peruvian Andes, dating to                at least 6,000 years ago. Erika Engelhaupt      <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>      It may have taken nearly 2,000 years for people in Chinas      Yangtze River basin to wrest complete control over rice,      researchers reported last year in Scientific      Reports. Scientists examined rice      fossils to determine how easily the plant shattered its      seed. Although people were growing an early rice 9,000 to      8,400 years ago, about 60 percent of plants were still      dispersing seeds via shattering. It wasnt until about 7,000      to 6,500 years ago that nonshattering rice began to edge out      shattering varieties.    <\/p>\n<p>      By examining DNA from modern rice strains, Fuller and      evolutionary geneticist Michael Purugganan of New York      University think theyve       pieced together the rest of the rice domestication story.      DNA evidence clearly shows that Chinas wild O.      rufipogon was domesticated into O. sativa      japonica. Traders carried domesticated japonica      from China to India, where it was bred with the cultivated      rice species O. nivara to produce domesticated      aus about 4,000 years ago, Fuller, Purugganan and      colleagues reported in January in Molecular Biology and      Evolution. Indicas story is less clear because      its cultivated predecessor in India is still unknown. But the      genetic evidence indicates that it got its domestication      genes from Chinas japonica.    <\/p>\n<p>      Working out the step-by-step history of domesticated animals      is just as complicated. Until recently, researchers compared      DNA from modern domestic animals with that of wild relatives,      preferably the wild species that gave rise to the      domesticated species. Sometimes thats impossible to do.      There are no wild cattle, for instance. Aurochs  massive      cattle that eventually gave rise to domesticated cows  went      extinct when the last one died in 1627 in Polands Jaktorw      Forest.    <\/p>\n<p>      Horses wild ancestors are also extinct, but remains from the      warrior steeds of Genghis Khan and medieval knights, the      Romans chariot horses and the mounts of the ancient      Scythians, Greeks and Persians might fill in gaps in horse      history and prehistory. Through the Pegasus      project, begun in 2015, Orlando and colleagues have      collected ancient DNA from horse fossils from a wide variety      of time periods and cultures. Were looking at every      possible ancient equine culture on the planet, Orlando says.    <\/p>\n<p>      Before the project, scientists mostly had to rely on DNA from      modern horses to piece together the story of how the beasts      of burden were domesticated. Findings of those studies may be      misleading, Orlando and colleagues have concluded. For      instance, studies of modern horses mitochondrial DNA plus Y      chromosomes (passed from fathers to sons) told a nice, neat      story: At the beginning of horse domestication, people must      have captured just a few stallions and bred those stallions      to many different mares.    <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>      But when Orlando and colleagues examined DNA of ancient      horses, they found that the story started completely      differently. Domesticated horses living 2,300 to 2,700 years      ago  about the midpoint of horse domestication  had a      wide variety of Y chromosomes, the researchers reported      April 28 in Science (SN:      5\/27\/17, p. 10). That means many stallions      contributed DNA to horses gene pool for at least the first      few thousand years of domestication. It wasnt until sometime      after 2,300 years ago that people started winnowing down the      number of stallions that were allowed to breed. Orlando      doesnt know yet when most Y chromosomes were lost.    <\/p>\n<p>      The story of chicken domestication is being retold as well,      also thanks to DNA evidence. Modern chickens carry a version      of the thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor gene,      TSHR, that has been linked to several domesticated      chicken characteristics: year-round egg laying, faster egg      production at sexual maturity, reduced aggression toward      other chickens and less fear of people. Because that version      of the gene is ubiquitous in present-day chickens and is      responsible for those attractive traits, researchers thought      that people probably selected the most prolific egg layers      right from the very beginning, about 4,000 years ago. Picking      better laying hens       would also mean unwittingly choosing the domesticated      version of TSHR.    <\/p>\n<p>      But,       the egg-laying version of the gene didnt become popular      among chickens in Europe until about A.D. 920, around the      time that Christians started giving up meat on fasting days      in favor of fish and fowl, Larson and colleagues reported May      2 in Molecular Biology and Evolution. (Rabbit      domestication followed      a religious proclamation, as well. In 600, Pope Gregory I      declared that fetal rabbits, called laurices, are aquatic,      which made them fish, suitable to eat during Lent. Rabbit      breeding took off in monasteries in southern France, and      bunnies quickly became domesticated.)    <\/p>\n<p>        Turkeys are one of the most recently domesticated animals.        In 2016, researchers         found 1,500-year-old turkey eggs plus bones of both        chicks and adult birds in the Oaxaca region of Mexico. The        presence of turkeys at all life stages suggests they were        being raised as food. They may have been important        symbolically too; remains have been found buried alongside        humans. The birds have changed a great deal since those        early days: Some commercially bred turkeys have breast        muscles so large that the birds cant get close enough to        mate. Humans must artificially inseminate them, a sign of        true domestication. Erika Engelhaupt      <\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>      If Larsons calculations are correct, egg laying wasnt the      main criterion for selecting which chickens to keep until the      Middle Ages. By that time, the birds had been domesticated      for thousands of years. So what were ancient people looking      for when striking up friendships with the feathered animals       or any other creatures? Many people think it was about the      relationship; tameness and docility were the most attractive      qualities in potential animal pals. Its hard to be buddies      with a creature that constantly runs from you, or worse,      attacks.    <\/p>\n<p>      A breeding experiment with wild red jungle fowl, the      precursor to the domesticated chicken, may help explain      whether selecting for tameness is the triggering event of      domestication and all its characteristics. Behavioral      geneticist Per Jensen of Linkping University in Sweden is in      the middle of a domestication redo. He and colleagues have      bred eight generations of the rust-feathered birds. Like the      rats, mink and foxes in Novosibirsk, Jensens jungle fowl are      bred to be more (or less) fearful of humans than their      ancestors were.    <\/p>\n<p>      From the beginning, the researchers took great pains to      select birds only for their behavior: Jungle fowl were tested      for tameness at 12 weeks old, before they reached sexual      maturity. One researcher would approach the fowl and attempt      to touch it, while an outside observer scored the birds      reaction. Neither researcher knew whether they were testing a      jungle fowl from the tame or fearful line.    <\/p>\n<p>      Mind you, this went well for two or three generations but      then the difference started to be so big it was difficult to      keep a secret, Jensen says. After that, the tame birds were      so calm they didnt react when a human entered the room. You      basically had to kick them out of your way, he jokes. By the      sixth generation, tame birds       were bigger and had a higher metabolism than their      fearful counterparts, Jensen and colleagues reported in      Biology Letters in 2015. Changes in body size,      reproduction and metabolism happened quickly, even though the      researchers were only choosing birds for tameness.    <\/p>\n<p>      The tame birds, Jensen says, show a lot of traits that you      really associate with domesticated animals, but Im not sure      anyone would accept that, he says. Becoming what other      people think of as domesticated chickens may take more time:      jungle fowl hens that lay eggs year-round and are big enough      to eat. I dont think were talking about hundreds of      generations, maybe dozens. Its a much faster process than we      used to think.    <\/p>\n<p>      Again and again, animals of various species domesticated at      different times in different parts of the world develop the      same domestication syndrome characteristics: more extensive      breeding periods; smaller brains, hearts and teeth; small or      floppy ears; spotted coats; curly hair and tails; variable      numbers of vertebrae in the spine; and juvenile faces with      shorter snouts. Researchers have found evidence that      pigmentation genes differ between domestic and wild animals.      Others have pinpointed       changes in brain chemistry or genes involved in face      development that may separate tame and wild animals. But      scientists didnt have a unifying explanation for why the      physical traits of domestication syndrome were linked to      tameness until three years ago.    <\/p>\n<p>        Humans may have selected animals for tameness (left        column), with those choices leading to unintended features        seen in many domesticated species (right column). One        hypothesis is that tameness, which involves a calmer        nervous system and a dampened stress hormone response,        results from alterations in neural crest cells. Those cells        migrate throughout the embryo to form many tissues. Changes        in the cells migration might account for many physical        traits linked to tameness in domesticated animals.      <\/p>\n<p>        Source: A.S. Wilkins, R.W. Wrangham and W.T.        Fitch\/Genetics 2014      <\/p>\n<p>      Thats when geneticist Adam Wilkins of Humboldt University of      Berlin, primatologist Richard Wrangham of Harvard University      and evolutionary biologist and cognitive scientist W.      Tecumseh Fitch of the University of Vienna introduced a      new hypothesis. Selecting animals for tameness, they      said, could alter genes that control a group of      developmentally important cells called neural crest cells.      Those embryonic cells migrate in the embryo and contribute to      tissues involved in the fight-or-flight response, facial      development and coloring.    <\/p>\n<p>      Choosing animals for tameness might be selecting for ones      that have changes in how their neural crest cells function,      the researchers proposed in Genetics in 2014      (SN:      8\/23\/14, p. 7). Calmer domesticated animals might      have neural crest cells that move or work differently than      the cells in more fearful wild animals. Because neural crest      cells contribute to so many tissues in the body, altering      their function could change an animals behavior, appearance      and biology, the researchers reasoned. For the first time,      domestication researchers had a hypothesis about the link      between tameness and physical traits that could really be put      to the scientific test.    <\/p>\n<p>        It would be hard to recognize todays toothsome corncobs        from the plants wild progenitor, a grass called teosinte.        When Native Americans began domesticating teosinte, its        ears were two or three inches long, holding a sparse five        to 12 kernels each. In fact, teosinte looks so different        from maize that scientists questioned the link,         first proposed in the 1930s, until genetics could prove        it more than half a century later. In 2009, archaeologists        found the earliest        known evidence of domesticated maize at an        8,700-year-old site in southwestern Mexico, alongside stone        tools used to grind the plants. Erika Engelhaupt      <\/p>\n<p>      Since the neural crest hypothesis surfaced, geneticists have      found tantalizing clues that Wilkins, Wrangham and Fitch are      onto something. Analysis of cat DNA found that house cats and      wild cats have      different versions of genes implicated in neural crest      cell migration (SN:      12\/13\/14, p. 7). When Orlando and colleagues      examined horse DNA for genes that may have rapidly changed      during domestication, they too found      genes involved in neural crest cell function.    <\/p>\n<p>      While at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary      Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, Cagan compared DNA from the      tame rats and mink at Novosibirsk, and from other      domesticated species, with DNA from aggressive counterparts      and wild ancestors. In unpublished research, Cagan (now at      the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Hinxton, England)      found that genes involved in helping neural crest cells      migrate differed between the tame and wild animals (SN:      6\/13\/15, p. 11). That might explain the white      patches of fur, shorter snouts and curly tails of the tame      animals.    <\/p>\n<p>      Jensen calls the neural crest cell hypothesis a very      speculative idea that may not be applicable across species.      He is looking more closely at the neural crest in the jungle      fowl. He and colleagues are collecting eggs to track the      cells movements in tame and fearful birds. Even if the      researchers find differences, he says, we still need to find      the genetic mechanisms that are causing the neural crest      cells to act as they do.    <\/p>\n<p>      Larson expects many revelations in the next year or two about      when, where and how domestication happened. Even the big      themes are going to be radically revised, he says.      Domestication is likely to be a far more complicated process      than researchers expected, but Larson hopes people will find      it all the more interesting for its lack of simplicity. We      want to get people to embrace the ambiguity and to love the      complexity.    <\/p>\n<p>      This article appears in the July 8, 2017, issue of      Science News with the headline: \"The road to tameness:      Fresh ideas emerge about the origins of humans' relationships      with their favorite species.\"    <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Link:<br \/>\n<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.sciencenews.org\/article\/dna-evidence-rewriting-domestication-origin-stories\" title=\"DNA evidence is rewriting domestication origin stories - Science News Magazine\">DNA evidence is rewriting domestication origin stories - Science News Magazine<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> One lab full of rats looks pretty much the same as another.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/transhuman-news-blog\/dna\/dna-evidence-is-rewriting-domestication-origin-stories-science-news-magazine\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[26],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-203955","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-dna"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/203955"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/9"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=203955"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/203955\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=203955"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=203955"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=203955"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}