Perri Angela R, Feuerborn Tatiana R, Frantz Laurent A F, Larson Greger, Malhi Ripan S, Meltzer David J, Witt Kelsey E
Department of Archaeology, Durham University, Durham DH1 3LE, United Kingdom;
GLOBE Institute, University of Copenhagen, 1350 Copenhagen, Denmark.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Feb 9;118(6). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2010083118.
Advances in the isolation and sequencing of ancient DNA have begun to reveal the population histories of both people and dogs. Over the last 10,000 y, the genetic signatures of ancient dog remains have been linked with known human dispersals in regions such as the Arctic and the remote Pacific. It is suspected, however, that this relationship has a much deeper antiquity, and that the tandem movement of people and dogs may have begun soon after the domestication of the dog from a gray wolf ancestor in the late Pleistocene. Here, by comparing population genetic results of humans and dogs from Siberia, Beringia, and North America, we show that there is a close correlation in the movement and divergences of their respective lineages. This evidence places constraints on when and where dog domestication took place. Most significantly, it suggests that dogs were domesticated in Siberia by ∼23,000 y ago, possibly while both people and wolves were isolated during the harsh climate of the Last Glacial Maximum. Dogs then accompanied the first people into the Americas and traveled with them as humans rapidly dispersed into the continent beginning ∼15,000 y ago.
古代DNA分离和测序技术的进步已开始揭示人类和狗的种群历史。在过去一万年里,古代狗遗骸的基因特征已与北极和偏远太平洋等地区已知的人类迁徙联系起来。然而,据推测这种关系有着更为久远的历史,而且人类和狗的协同迁徙可能在晚更新世狗从灰狼祖先驯化而来后不久就开始了。在此,通过比较来自西伯利亚、白令陆桥和北美的人类与狗的种群遗传结果,我们发现它们各自谱系的迁移和分化之间存在密切关联。这一证据对狗的驯化时间和地点施加了限制。最重要的是,这表明狗约在23000年前于西伯利亚被驯化,可能是在末次盛冰期的恶劣气候期间人类和狼都处于隔离状态的时候。随后,狗伴随首批人类进入美洲,并在约15000年前人类迅速扩散到该大陆时与他们一同迁徙。