Central European Woolly Mammoth Population Dynamics: Insights from Late Pleistocene Mitochondrial Genomes

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作者
James A. Fellows Yates
Dorothée G. Drucker
Ella Reiter
Simon Heumos
Frido Welker
Susanne C. Münzel
Piotr Wojtal
Martina Lázničková-Galetová
Nicholas J. Conard
Alexander Herbig
Hervé Bocherens
Johannes Krause
机构
[1] University of Tübingen,Institute for Archaeological Science
[2] Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History,Department of Archaeogenetics
[3] University of Tübingen,Department of Geosciences
[4] University of Tübingen,Senckenberg Centre for Human Evolution and Paleoenvironment (HEP)
[5] University of Tübingen,Quantitative Biology Centre Tubingen
[6] Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology,Department of Human Evolution
[7] Polish Academy of Sciences,The Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals
[8] University of West Bohemia,Department of Anthropology, Faculty of Philosophy and Arts
[9] Moravian Museum,Centre for Cultural Anthropology
[10] Faculty of Science CU,Hrdlicka Museum of Man
[11] Institut de Paléontologie Humaine,Département de Préhistoire du MNHN
[12] Schloss Hohentubingen,Department of Early Prehistory and Quaternary Ecology
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The population dynamics of the Pleistocene woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) has been the subject of intensive palaeogenetic research. Although a large number of mitochondrial genomes across Eurasia have been reconstructed, the available data remains geographically sparse and mostly focused on eastern Eurasia. Thus, population dynamics in other regions have not been extensively investigated. Here, we use a multi-method approach utilising proteomic, stable isotope and genetic techniques to identify and generate twenty woolly mammoth mitochondrial genomes, and associated dietary stable isotopic data, from highly fragmentary Late Pleistocene material from central Europe. We begin to address region-specific questions regarding central European woolly mammoth populations, highlighting parallels with a previous replacement event in eastern Eurasia ten thousand years earlier. A high number of shared derived mutations between woolly mammoth mitochondrial clades are identified, questioning previous phylogenetic analysis and thus emphasizing the need for nuclear DNA studies to explicate the increasingly complex genetic history of the woolly mammoth.
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