| Literature DB >> 27924839 |
Saskia Wutke1, Norbert Benecke2, Edson Sandoval-Castellanos3, Hans-Jürgen Döhle4, Susanne Friederich4, Javier Gonzalez5, Jón Hallsteinn Hallsson6, Michael Hofreiter5, Lembi Lõugas7, Ola Magnell8, Arturo Morales-Muniz9, Ludovic Orlando10, Albína Hulda Pálsdóttir6, Monika Reissmann11, Matej Ruttkay12, Alexandra Trinks5, Arne Ludwig1.
Abstract
Horses have been valued for their diversity of coat colour since prehistoric times; this is especially the case since their domestication in the Caspian steppe in ~3,500 BC. Although we can assume that human preferences were not constant, we have only anecdotal information about how domestic horses were influenced by humans. Our results from genotype analyses show a significant increase in spotted coats in early domestic horses (Copper Age to Iron Age). In contrast, medieval horses carried significantly fewer alleles for these phenotypes, whereas solid phenotypes (i.e., chestnut) became dominant. This shift may have been supported because of (i) pleiotropic disadvantages, (ii) a reduced need to separate domestic horses from their wild counterparts, (iii) a lower religious prestige, or (iv) novel developments in weaponry. These scenarios may have acted alone or in combination. However, the dominance of chestnut is a remarkable feature of the medieval horse population.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27924839 PMCID: PMC5141471 DOI: 10.1038/srep38548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Occurrence of eight horse coat colour phenotypes based on their location for six different periods.
For each spotted phenotype (leopard, tobiano and sabino) all samples, independent of their basic colour (bay, black or chestnut), are included. The map was made using Gimp 2.8.10 (www.gimp.org).
Figure 2Numbers and frequencies of all spotted/diluted versus basic-coloured (solid) phenotypes for six different periods.
The bar plot displays the absolute number of horses with the respective phenotype (grey represents all spotted and diluted horses, yellow represents horses with a solid coat colour). The blue line indicates the frequency of the spotted/diluted coat-colour variants, and the numbers above it indicate the significance of the changes in frequency, which were calculated using Pearson’s chi-squared test.
Figure 3(A) Violin plots representing the posterior distributions of the parameters that were inferred by simulation-MCMC. Each chart represents a phenotype and each violin plot a selection coefficient in each period (indicated). The two parameters at right are the initial allele frequency and the age of the derived allele. The empty spaces (e.g. Cream phenotype in the Middle Bronze Age) occur because some simulations had several periods merged due to the derived allele appeared very late in the sampling, making the selection at the earliest periods pointless. (B) Violin plots of the initial allele frequency (top) and age (bottom) of the derived alleles. The empty places correspond to the cases when the derived allele first appeared in the Pleistocene, the allele associated to the corresponding phenotype was not derived (Bay); or the introduction of alleles didn’t get an appreciable probability. The green line represents the time of domestication, and the numbers above the probabilities that the age of the derived allele was younger than domestication.
Figure 4Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse on the Beato de Fernando I y doña Sancha dated 1047 AD.
(Apoc. VI, 1–8f. 135; shelf 14-2 National Library, Madrid; https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:B_Facundus_135.jpg).