The earliest farmers of northwest China exploited grain-fed pheasants not chickens
Autor: | Brittany Bingham, Cara Monroe, Loukas Barton, Krithivasan Sankaranarayanan, Ariane Thomas, Brian M. Kemp |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
China animal structures Zoology lcsh:Medicine Gallus gallus domesticus Evolutionary ecology Red jungle fowl DNA Mitochondrial Quail Article Evolutionary genetics Domestication 03 medical and health sciences Animals Humans 0601 history and archaeology East Asia Millets lcsh:Science Phylogeny Farmers Multidisciplinary 060102 archaeology biology business.industry lcsh:R 06 humanities and the arts biology.organism_classification 030104 developmental biology Geography Archaeology Biogeography Agriculture lcsh:Q Adaptation business Chickens Phasianus |
Zdroj: | Scientific Reports, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-7 (2020) Scientific Reports |
ISSN: | 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41598-020-59316-5 |
Popis: | Though chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) are globally ubiquitous today, the timing, location, and manner of their domestication is contentious. Until recently, archaeologists placed the origin of the domestic chicken in northern China, perhaps as early as 8,000 years ago. Such evidence however complicates our understanding of how the chicken was domesticated because its wild progenitor – the red jungle fowl (Gallus gallus) – lives in tropical ecosystems and does not exist in northern China today or in the recent past. Increasingly, multiple lines of evidence suggest that many of the archaeological bird remains underlying this northern origins hypothesis have been misidentified. Here we analyze the mitochondrial DNA of some of the earliest purported chickens from the Dadiwan site in northern China and conclude that they are pheasants (Phasianus colchicus). Curiously, stable isotope values from the same birds reveal that their diet was heavy in agricultural products (namely millet), meaning that they lived adjacent to or among some of the earliest farming communities in East Asia. We suggest that the exploitation of these baited birds was an important adaptation for early farmers in China’s arid north, and that management practices like these likely played a role in the domestication of animals – including the chicken – in similar contexts throughout the region. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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