Baldi Norberto F, Crawford Michael H
1 School of Anthropology, University of Costa Rica, San Pedro de Montes de Oca, Costa Rica.
2 Laboratory of Biological Anthropology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
Hum Biol. 2016 Apr;88(2):168-181. doi: 10.13110/humanbiology.88.2.0168.
The Rama are a coastal population from southern Nicaragua who in large part were able to resist, at least for a time, the cultural changes and social reorganization brought on by colonial and modern influences. Historical information leaves the Rama origins and biological relationships with nearby extinct and extant groups ambiguous. The objective of this study was to examine the internal genetic microdifferentiation based on the first hypervariable region of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from a sample of approximately 20% of the population, and to expand the few available historical and anthropological data on the Rama by exploring the effects of cultural practices and historical events on genetic structure, providing an integrative perspective on the Rama genetic history. When considering differences in the spatial distribution and genetic diversity of the mtDNA haplotypes together with historical information on the Rama, a noteworthy pattern emerges. (a) Haplotypes are differentially distributed among a central Rama community (Punta Águila) compared with the other five peripheral communities (analysis of molecular variance: F = 0.10, p < 0.001), and their distribution is consistent with the historical relocation of this population after their split from Punta Gorda in the 18th century. (b) Differential genetic signatures found among central and peripheral Rama communities resemble two population histories: one of stability (haplogroup A2) and other of expansion (haplogroup B2), supporting the possibility that these patterns of genetic microdifferentiation between central and peripheral populations resulted from the 18th-century unification in southern Nicaragua of the Rama and a group of Voto migrants from Costa Rica that later split off and moved to the Bay of Bluefields.
拉马人是来自尼加拉瓜南部的沿海群体,他们在很大程度上能够至少在一段时间内抵制殖民和现代影响带来的文化变迁和社会重组。历史信息使得拉马人的起源以及与附近已灭绝和现存群体的生物学关系模糊不清。本研究的目的是基于线粒体DNA(mtDNA)的第一个高变区,对约20%的拉马人群体样本进行内部遗传微分化研究,并通过探索文化习俗和历史事件对遗传结构的影响,扩充关于拉马人的少量现有历史和人类学数据,从而提供一个关于拉马人遗传历史的综合视角。当将mtDNA单倍型的空间分布和遗传多样性差异与拉马人的历史信息结合起来考虑时,一个值得注意的模式出现了。(a)与其他五个外围社区相比,单倍型在拉马人中部社区(蓬塔阿吉拉)的分布存在差异(分子方差分析:F = 0.10,p < 0.001),并且它们的分布与该群体在18世纪从蓬塔戈尔达分裂后发生的历史迁移一致。(b)在拉马人中部和外围社区发现的不同遗传特征类似于两种群体历史:一种是稳定的(单倍群A2),另一种是扩张的(单倍群B2),这支持了中部和外围群体之间这种遗传微分化模式可能是由于18世纪拉马人与一群来自哥斯达黎加的沃托移民在尼加拉瓜南部统一,随后这些移民分裂并迁往布卢菲尔兹湾所致的可能性。