Jeanjean Marine, Mureau Cyprien, Claude Julien, Balcarcel Ana, Evin Allowen
Université de Montpellier, Institut des sciences de l'évolution de Montpellier, 34095 Montpellier, France.
Department of Biology, Faculty of Sciences, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2025 May;380(1926):20240514. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2024.0514. Epub 2025 May 15.
Since their domestication about 10 500 years ago, sheep and goats have been central to human subsistence economies. Despite shared traits and frequent co-herding, these species are biologically distinct, with their uses reflecting diverse cultural practices. Advances in geometric morphometrics enable detailed analyses of their phenotypic evolution, shaped by natural and artificial selection, genetic drift and gene flow. These evolutionary mechanisms are often challenging to disentangle in archaeozoology, but patterns of morphometric variation can reveal evolutionary parallels and divergences. This study investigates the morphometric evolution of sheep and goat teeth in the northwestern Mediterranean basin over 8000 years. Dental remains, which preserve well in archaeological contexts, provide rich data for evolutionary studies, including species-level identifications. Using two-dimensional geometric morphometrics, third lower molars from 1602 sheep and 635 goats, spanning archaeological and modern specimens, were analysed. Molar size, shape and variance were compared across six chrono-cultural phases, tracing diachronic morphological changes. Distinct patterns emerge: sheep exhibit greater variability likely reflecting selective breeding for diverse purposes. Goats, in contrast, show greater uniformity. These findings underscore unique evolutionary trajectories for sheep and goats, offering new perspectives on their biocultural evolution within the dynamic environmental and anthropic contexts that shaped their current diversity.This article is part of the theme issue 'Unravelling domestication: multi-disciplinary perspectives on human and non-human relationships in the past, present and future'.
自约10500年前被驯化以来,绵羊和山羊一直是人类生存经济的核心。尽管它们有共同的特征且经常一起放牧,但这两个物种在生物学上是不同的,其用途反映了多样的文化习俗。几何形态测量学的进展使得能够对它们在自然选择、人工选择、遗传漂变和基因流动作用下的表型进化进行详细分析。在考古动物学中,这些进化机制往往难以厘清,但形态测量变异模式可以揭示进化的相似之处和差异。本研究调查了地中海盆地西北部8000年来绵羊和山羊牙齿的形态测量进化。牙齿遗骸在考古环境中保存良好,为进化研究提供了丰富的数据,包括物种层面的鉴定。利用二维几何形态测量学,对跨越考古和现代样本的1602颗绵羊和635颗山羊的右下第三磨牙进行了分析。比较了六个年代文化阶段的臼齿大小、形状和变异情况,并追踪历时性形态变化。出现了明显的模式:绵羊表现出更大的变异性,这可能反映了为不同目的进行的选择性育种。相比之下,山羊表现出更大的一致性。这些发现强调了绵羊和山羊独特的进化轨迹,为它们在塑造其当前多样性的动态环境和人类环境中的生物文化进化提供了新的视角。本文是主题为 “解开驯化之谜:关于过去、现在和未来人类与非人类关系的多学科视角” 的一部分。