posted on 2020-06-25, 13:33authored byIain Mathieson, Federico Abascal, Lasse Vinner, Pontus Skoglund, Cristina Pomilla, Peter Mitchell, Charles Arthur, Deepti Gurdasani, Eske Willerslev, Manj S Sandhu, Genevieve Dewar
Baboons are one of the most abundant large nonhuman primates and are widely studied in biomedical, behavioral and anthropological research. Despite this, our knowledge of their evolutionary and demographic history remains incomplete. Here, we report a 0.9-fold coverage genome sequence from a 5800-year-old baboon from the site of Ha Makotoko in Lesotho. The ancient baboon is closely related to present-day Papio ursinus individuals from southern Africa-indicating a high degree of continuity in the southern African baboon population. This level of population continuity is rare in recent human populations, but may provide a good model for the evolution of Homo and other large primates over similar timespans in structured populations throughout Africa.
Funding
Crick (Grant ID: 10595, Grant title: Skoglund FC001595)
Wellcome Trust (Grant ID: 217223/Z/19/Z, Grant title: WT 217223/Z/19/Z)
European Research Council (Grant ID: 852558, Grant title: ERC 852558)