Genetic Structure of the Western and Eastern African Sahel/Savannah Belt and the Role of Nomadic Pastoralists as Inferred from the Variation of D-Loop Mitochondrial DNA Sequences
Jazyk angličtina Země Spojené státy americké Médium print
Typ dokumentu srovnávací studie, historické články, časopisecké články, práce podpořená grantem
PubMed
30047317
PII: 10.13110/humanbiology.89.4.02
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- Klíčová slova
- african pastoralism, arabs, fulani, mtdna, sahel,
- MeSH
- Arabové genetika MeSH
- archeologie metody MeSH
- černoši genetika dějiny MeSH
- dějiny starověku MeSH
- dějiny středověku MeSH
- emigrace a imigrace MeSH
- genetické struktury MeSH
- jazyk (prostředek komunikace) MeSH
- jednonukleotidový polymorfismus genetika MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- mitochondriální DNA genetika MeSH
- osoby s přechodným pobytem a migranti MeSH
- populační genetika MeSH
- tok genů genetika MeSH
- zemědělství trendy MeSH
- Check Tag
- dějiny starověku MeSH
- dějiny středověku MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- ženské pohlaví MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- historické články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
- srovnávací studie MeSH
- Geografické názvy
- severní Afrika epidemiologie MeSH
- Názvy látek
- mitochondriální DNA MeSH
The objective of this study was to provide deeper knowledge of the maternal genetic structure and demographic history of the human populations of the Sahel/Savannah belt, the extensive region lying between the Sahara and tropical rainforests, spanning from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea coast. The study aimed to confirm or disconfirm archaeological and linguistic data indicating that the region's populations underwent diversification as a result of the spread of agropastoral food-producing subsistence lifestyles, over time dividing the region into separate areas of nomadic pastoralism, on the one hand, and sedentary farming, on the other. To perform both descriptive and coalescence analyses from the Sahel/Savannah belt's entire region, including western and eastern rather than just central populations studied previously, we generated a new mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) data set not only having almost 2,000 samples (875 of which were newly collected) but also encompassing whole mtDNA D-loop segment rather than only the previously studied hypervariable segment 1. While comparing our analyses with previous results from the Lake Chad Basin (central Sahel/Savannah Belt), we found similar intrapopulation diversity measures (i.e., lower values in pastoralists than in farmers). However, the new data set pointed to significant differences in mating strategies between western and eastern pastoralists: our results suggest higher gene flow between the Arabic pastoralists and neighboring farmers in the eastern part than between the Fulani pastoralists and their sedentary neighbors in the western part of the Sahel/Savannah belt. The findings are discussed in light of archaeological and linguistic data, allowing us to postulate that the genetic differentiation of Fulani pastoralists from the common western African agropastoral gene pool occurred at around the same time as the arrival of the Arabic pastoralists to eastern Africa. However, it seems that while the process of divergence of the Fulani pastoralists in the west was accompanied by a loss of Fulani females to other populations, the Arab pastoralists' immigration to the Sahel/Savannah belt conversely resulted in some gain of local females into this Arab population.
Arabic Department Faculty of Arts University of Kordofan Al Ubayyid Sudan
Department of Zoology Faculty of Science Charles University Prague Czech Republic
Population history and admixture of the Fulani people from the Sahel
Demographic and Selection Histories of Populations Across the Sahel/Savannah Belt
Circum-Saharan Prehistory through the Lens of mtDNA Diversity