A Partial African Ancestry for the Creole Cattle Populations of the Caribbean
Autor: | A. Morrow, Claude Gaillard, Daniel G. Bradley, C.S. Troy, Jean-Charles Maillard, S. S. C. Harrison, C. Meghen, David A. Magee, T. Cymbron |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
Bétail
Phylogénie ADN Creole language Population Hérédité Zoology Biology DNA Mitochondrial Species Specificity Caribbean region Genetic variation Genetics Animals education Molecular Biology Phylogeny Genetics (clinical) Caribbean island education.field_of_study 630 Agriculture Haplotype Gene Amplification Genetic Variation L10 - Génétique et amélioration des animaux Zebu Europe Caribbean Region Africa 590 Animals (Zoology) Cattle Microsatellite Repeats Biotechnology Founder effect |
Zdroj: | Magee, D. A.; Meghen, C.; Harrison, S.; Troy, C. S.; Cymbron, T.; Gaillard, C.; Morrow, A.; Maillard, J. C.; Bradley, D. G. (2002). A Partial African Ancestry for the Creole Cattle Populations of the Caribbean. Journal of heredity, 93(6), pp. 429-432. Oxford University Press 10.1093/jhered/93.6.429 Journal of Heredity |
DOI: | 10.1093/jhered/93.6.429 |
Popis: | Seventy-eight cattle samples from three Creole Caribbean islands and one Brazilian breed were analyzed for sequence variation in the hypervariable segment of the mitochondrial DNA control region. Seventy-three samples displayed Bos taurus haplotypes, and five samples exhibited haplotypes that were of Bos indicus ancestry. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that all sampled B. taurus sequences fell into two distinct clusters with separate African and European origins. European sequences were encountered in each population; however, the distribution of African haplotypes was uneven, with the highest proportion of African influence found in the Guadeloupe Creole. The reduced levels of African haplotypic variation within the Caribbean and Brazilian are consistent with prior founder effects. Additionally, genetic variation at three microsatellite loci illustrated African influence uniquely in the Guadeloupe Creole. Collectively, the data suggest that this African influence is, at least in part, attributable to the historical importation of African cattle to the Americas. Furthermore, alleles of B. indicus ancestry were detected at appreciable frequencies in all Caribbean Creole populations and may reflect zebu introgressions from either West Africa or the Indian subcontinent. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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