Using commensals as proxies for historical inference in the Indian ocean: genetic and zooarchaeological perspectives

The human-abetted introduction of commensal species (i.e. those that opportunistically exploit the anthropogenic environment for food and shelter, e.g. rats, cockroaches etc.) to new areas has occurred throughout history. This has resulted in detrimental ecological changes worldwide but, from a view...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eager, H, Eager, Heidi
Other Authors: Boivin, N, Searle, J
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:e6be79c9-3fb8-4a7f-b117-0c607b64c95a
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spelling ftuloxford:oai:ora.ox.ac.uk:uuid:e6be79c9-3fb8-4a7f-b117-0c607b64c95a 2023-05-15T18:05:37+02:00 Using commensals as proxies for historical inference in the Indian ocean: genetic and zooarchaeological perspectives Eager, H Eager, Heidi Boivin, N Searle, J 2016-07-29 https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:e6be79c9-3fb8-4a7f-b117-0c607b64c95a eng eng https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:e6be79c9-3fb8-4a7f-b117-0c607b64c95a info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess Paleozoology Archeology Thesis 2016 ftuloxford 2022-06-28T20:26:40Z The human-abetted introduction of commensal species (i.e. those that opportunistically exploit the anthropogenic environment for food and shelter, e.g. rats, cockroaches etc.) to new areas has occurred throughout history. This has resulted in detrimental ecological changes worldwide but, from a viewpoint of human knowledge, a beneficial corollary of these translocations is that the species in question can be used as proxies to study the movement of the humans who transported them. I reconstruct colonisation histories of three widespread commensal mammalian species in the Western Indian Ocean, the black rat Rattus rattus, house mouse Mus musculus and Asian house shrew Suncus murinus, through phylogeographic studies (the geographic distribution of genetic lineages) of maternally-inherited mitochondrial markers, and zooarchaeological data. The DNA analyses are conducted on samples largely derived from museum specimens collected up to 110 years ago, and from archaeological bones (in the case of rats). I show considerable cryptic diversity in all three species, particularly in mice for which we find a potential major new lineage. Certain lineages within each species predominantly reveal long-distance translocations within the Indian Ocean, but high resolution geographic and genetic clustering is also evident, particularly in Asian house shrews. Phylogeographic structuring of the three species in East Africa and the southern Indian Ocean region (e.g. Madagascar, Reunion, etc.) indicate connections with Arabia, the Middle East, and India in the Islamic period from the first millennium AD, and later European connections during the Age of Exploration. Closer to the origins of the three species (the Indian subcontinent in all cases), range expansions in Eurasia and nearby islands relate to early to mid Holocene human populations, but also with signals of later secondary colonisations. Through ancient DNA studies I found genetic continuity between temporally separated populations of black rats suggesting population ... Thesis Rattus rattus ORA - Oxford University Research Archive Indian
institution Open Polar
collection ORA - Oxford University Research Archive
op_collection_id ftuloxford
language English
topic Paleozoology
Archeology
spellingShingle Paleozoology
Archeology
Eager, H
Eager, Heidi
Using commensals as proxies for historical inference in the Indian ocean: genetic and zooarchaeological perspectives
topic_facet Paleozoology
Archeology
description The human-abetted introduction of commensal species (i.e. those that opportunistically exploit the anthropogenic environment for food and shelter, e.g. rats, cockroaches etc.) to new areas has occurred throughout history. This has resulted in detrimental ecological changes worldwide but, from a viewpoint of human knowledge, a beneficial corollary of these translocations is that the species in question can be used as proxies to study the movement of the humans who transported them. I reconstruct colonisation histories of three widespread commensal mammalian species in the Western Indian Ocean, the black rat Rattus rattus, house mouse Mus musculus and Asian house shrew Suncus murinus, through phylogeographic studies (the geographic distribution of genetic lineages) of maternally-inherited mitochondrial markers, and zooarchaeological data. The DNA analyses are conducted on samples largely derived from museum specimens collected up to 110 years ago, and from archaeological bones (in the case of rats). I show considerable cryptic diversity in all three species, particularly in mice for which we find a potential major new lineage. Certain lineages within each species predominantly reveal long-distance translocations within the Indian Ocean, but high resolution geographic and genetic clustering is also evident, particularly in Asian house shrews. Phylogeographic structuring of the three species in East Africa and the southern Indian Ocean region (e.g. Madagascar, Reunion, etc.) indicate connections with Arabia, the Middle East, and India in the Islamic period from the first millennium AD, and later European connections during the Age of Exploration. Closer to the origins of the three species (the Indian subcontinent in all cases), range expansions in Eurasia and nearby islands relate to early to mid Holocene human populations, but also with signals of later secondary colonisations. Through ancient DNA studies I found genetic continuity between temporally separated populations of black rats suggesting population ...
author2 Boivin, N
Searle, J
format Thesis
author Eager, H
Eager, Heidi
author_facet Eager, H
Eager, Heidi
author_sort Eager, H
title Using commensals as proxies for historical inference in the Indian ocean: genetic and zooarchaeological perspectives
title_short Using commensals as proxies for historical inference in the Indian ocean: genetic and zooarchaeological perspectives
title_full Using commensals as proxies for historical inference in the Indian ocean: genetic and zooarchaeological perspectives
title_fullStr Using commensals as proxies for historical inference in the Indian ocean: genetic and zooarchaeological perspectives
title_full_unstemmed Using commensals as proxies for historical inference in the Indian ocean: genetic and zooarchaeological perspectives
title_sort using commensals as proxies for historical inference in the indian ocean: genetic and zooarchaeological perspectives
publishDate 2016
url https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:e6be79c9-3fb8-4a7f-b117-0c607b64c95a
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre Rattus rattus
genre_facet Rattus rattus
op_relation https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:e6be79c9-3fb8-4a7f-b117-0c607b64c95a
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/embargoedAccess
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