Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig D-04103, Germany.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2010 Mar;141(3):382-94. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.21155.
The transformation from a foraging way of life to a reliance on domesticated plants and animals often led to the expansion of agropastoralist populations at the expense of hunter-gatherers (HGs). In Africa, one of these expansions involved the Niger-Congo Bantu-speaking populations that started to spread southwards from Cameroon/Nigeria approximately 4,000 years ago, bringing agricultural technologies. Genetic studies have shown different degrees of gene flow (sometimes involving sex-biased migrations) between Bantu agriculturalists and HGs. Although these studies have covered many parts of sub-Saharan Africa, the central part (e.g. Zambia) was not yet studied, and the interactions between immigrating food-producers and local HGs are still unclear. Archeological evidence from the Luangwa Valley of Zambia suggests a long period of coexistence ( approximately 1,700 years) of early food-producers and HGs. To investigate if this apparent coexistence was accompanied by genetic admixture, we analyzed the mtDNA control region, Y chromosomal unique event polymorphisms, and 12 associated Y- short tandem repeats in two food-producing groups (Bisa and Kunda) that live today in the Luangwa Valley, and compared these data with available published data on African HGs. Our results suggest that both the Bisa and Kunda experienced at most low levels of admixture with HGs, and these levels do not differ between the maternal and paternal lineages. Coalescent simulations indicate that the genetic data best fit a demographic scenario with a long divergence (62,500 years) and little or no gene flow between the ancestors of the Bisa/Kunda and existing HGs. This scenario contrasts with the archaeological evidence for a long period of coexistence between the two different communities in the Luangwa Valley, and suggests a process of sociocultural boundary maintenance may have characterized their interaction.
从采集狩猎生活方式向依赖驯化的动植物的转变,往往导致农牧民人口的扩张,而以狩猎采集为生的人群(HGs)则相应减少。在非洲,其中一次扩张涉及到尼日尔-刚果班图语人群,他们大约在 4000 年前开始从喀麦隆/尼日利亚向南扩散,带来了农业技术。遗传研究表明,班图农业人口与 HG 之间存在不同程度的基因流(有时涉及性别偏向的迁移)。尽管这些研究涵盖了撒哈拉以南非洲的许多地区,但中部地区(如赞比亚)尚未得到研究,移民食物生产者与当地 HG 之间的相互作用仍不清楚。来自赞比亚卢安瓜谷的考古证据表明,早期的食物生产者和 HG 之间存在着长期的共存(大约 1700 年)。为了研究这种明显的共存是否伴随着基因混合,我们分析了卢安瓜谷两个今天仍在生活的食物生产者群体(Bisa 和 Kunda)的 mtDNA 控制区、Y 染色体独特事件多态性和 12 个相关的 Y-短串联重复,将这些数据与非洲 HG 的现有发表数据进行了比较。我们的研究结果表明,Bisa 和 Kunda 都经历了与 HG 最多低水平的混合,而且在母系和父系谱系之间没有差异。合并模拟表明,遗传数据最符合一个具有长分歧(62500 年)和 HG 之间很少或没有基因流的祖先的人口统计情景。这种情况与卢安瓜谷两个不同社区之间长期共存的考古证据形成对比,表明社会文化边界维持的过程可能是他们相互作用的特征。