Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Publication
    Strong and stable geographic differentiation of swamp buffalo maternal and paternal lineages indicates domestication in the China/Indochina border region
    (Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2016)
    Zhang, Yi
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    Lu, Yongfang
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    Cuong, Vu Chi
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    Pham, Lan Doan
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    Bouahom, Bounthong
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    Yang, Bingzhuang
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    Liang, Xianwei
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    Cai, Zhihua
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    Vankan, Dianne
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    Manatchaiworakul, Wallaya
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    Kowlim, Nonglid
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    Duangchantrasiri, Somphot
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    Yindee, Marnoch
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    Wajjwalku, Worawidh
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    Colenbrander, Ben
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    Zhang, Yuan
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    Beerli, Peter
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    Lenstra, Johannes A
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    Li, Kuan-Yi
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    Kuo, Hsiao-Yun
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    Ju, Yu-Ten
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    Ye, Shaohui
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    Faruque, Md Omar
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    Li, Qiang
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    Wang, Yachun
    The swamp type of the Asian water buffalo is assumed to have been domesticated by about 4000 years BP, following the introduction of rice cultivation. Previous localizations of the domestication site were based on mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation within China, accounting only for the maternal lineage. We carried out a comprehensive sampling of China, Taiwan, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, Nepal and Bangladesh and sequenced the mtDNA 'Cytochrome b' gene and control region and the Y-chromosomal ZFY, SRY and DBY sequences. Swamp buffalo has a higher diversity of both maternal and paternal lineages than river buffalo, with also a remarkable contrast between a weak phylogeographic structure of river buffalo and a strong geographic differentiation of swamp buffalo. The highest diversity of the swamp buffalo maternal lineages was found in south China and north Indochina on both banks of the Mekong River, while the highest diversity in paternal lineages was in the China/Indochina border region. We propose that domestication in this region was later followed by introgressive capture of wild cows west of the Mekong. Migration to the north followed the Yangtze valley as well as a more eastern route, but also involved translocations of both cows and bulls over large distances with a minor influence of river buffaloes in recent decades. Bayesian analyses of various migration models also supported domestication in the China/Indochina border region. Coalescence analysis yielded consistent estimates for the expansion of the major swamp buffalo haplogroups with a credibility interval of 900 to 3900 years BP. The spatial differentiation of mtDNA and Y-chromosomal haplotype distributions indicates a lack of gene flow between established populations that is unprecedented in livestock.
  • Publication
    The Swamp Buffalo: Domestication, Dispersal, and Genetic Differentiation
    (International Buffalo Information Centre, 2013)
    Zhang, Yi
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    Vankan, Dianne
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    Water buffalo is an important livestock species in Asia as well as in the world. The swamp type buffalo, found throughout southeast Asia, from Assam and Nepal in the west to the Yangtse valley of China, is traditionally reared to produce draft power and meat. In this study, microsatellite markers were analyzed to determine genetic origin and population relationships of swamp buffalo in China and south-east Asia. Results showed that populations in south-east Asia and southwest of China had highest level of genetic variability. Differentiation among the Chinese swamp populations was much less than among the southeast Asian. Relationships among the swamp populations (DA genetic distances and STRUCTURE analyses) show the southeast Asian populations separated into two groups by the Chinese populations. Given these relationships and the patterns of genetic variability, we postulate that the swamp buffalo was domesticated in the region of the far south of China, northern Thailand and Indochina. Following domestication, it spread south through peninsular Malaysia to Sumatra, Java and Sulawesi, and north through China, and then to Taiwan, the Philippines and Borneo.