Traditionally, the process of domestication is assumed to be initiated by humans, involve few individuals, and rely on reproductive isolation between wild and domestic forms. We analyzed pig domestication using over 100 genome sequences and tested whether pig domestication followed a traditional linear model, or a more complex, reticulate model. We found that the assumptions of traditional models, such as reproductive isolation and strong domestication bottlenecks, are incompatible with the genetic data. In addition, our results show that despite gene-flow, the genomes of domestic pigs show strong signatures of selection at loci that affect behaviour and morphology. We argue that recurrent selection for domestic traits likely counteracted t...
Ascertaining the molecular and physiological basis of domestication and breeding is an active area o...
Pig domestication began around 9000 YBP in the Fertile Crescent and Far East, involving marked morph...
Background: Pigs were domesticated independently in Eastern and Western Eurasia early during the agr...
Traditionally, the process of domestication is assumed to be initiated by humans, involve few indivi...
Traditionally, the process of domestication is assumed to be initiated by people, involve few indivi...
BACKGROUND: Artificial selection has caused rapid evolution in domesticated species. The identificat...
Background Artificial selection has caused rapid evolution in domesticated species. The identificati...
Land animal domestication has typically led to remarkable phenotypic diversity, stemming from a broa...
[Background]: Artificial selection has caused rapid evolution in domesticated species. The identific...
We propose to estimate the proportion of variance explained by regression on genome-wide markers (or...
We propose to estimate the proportion of variance explained by regression on genome-wide markers (or...
Background: Animal domestication involved drastic phenotypic changes driven by strong artificial sel...
BackgroundAnimal domestication involved drastic phenotypic changes driven by strong artificial selec...
We propose to estimate the proportion of variance explained by regression on genome-wide markers (or...
Background: Pigs were domesticated independently in Eastern and Western Eurasia early during the agr...
Ascertaining the molecular and physiological basis of domestication and breeding is an active area o...
Pig domestication began around 9000 YBP in the Fertile Crescent and Far East, involving marked morph...
Background: Pigs were domesticated independently in Eastern and Western Eurasia early during the agr...
Traditionally, the process of domestication is assumed to be initiated by humans, involve few indivi...
Traditionally, the process of domestication is assumed to be initiated by people, involve few indivi...
BACKGROUND: Artificial selection has caused rapid evolution in domesticated species. The identificat...
Background Artificial selection has caused rapid evolution in domesticated species. The identificati...
Land animal domestication has typically led to remarkable phenotypic diversity, stemming from a broa...
[Background]: Artificial selection has caused rapid evolution in domesticated species. The identific...
We propose to estimate the proportion of variance explained by regression on genome-wide markers (or...
We propose to estimate the proportion of variance explained by regression on genome-wide markers (or...
Background: Animal domestication involved drastic phenotypic changes driven by strong artificial sel...
BackgroundAnimal domestication involved drastic phenotypic changes driven by strong artificial selec...
We propose to estimate the proportion of variance explained by regression on genome-wide markers (or...
Background: Pigs were domesticated independently in Eastern and Western Eurasia early during the agr...
Ascertaining the molecular and physiological basis of domestication and breeding is an active area o...
Pig domestication began around 9000 YBP in the Fertile Crescent and Far East, involving marked morph...
Background: Pigs were domesticated independently in Eastern and Western Eurasia early during the agr...