De Martino, Marco / de Cupere, Bea / Rovelli, Valentina / Serventi, Patrizia / Mouraud, Betty / Baldoni, Marica / Di Corcia, Tullia / Geiger, Sheila / Alhaique, Francesca / Alves, Paulo C. / Buitenhuis, Hijlke / Ceccaroni, Emanuela / Cerilli, E. / De Grossi Mazzorin, Jacopo / Detry, Cleia / Dowd, Marion / Fiore, Ivana / Gourichon, Lionel / Grau-Sologestoa, Idoia / Küchelmann, Hans Christian / Kunst, Günther Karl / McCarthy, Margaret / Miccichè, Roberto Maria / Minniti, Claudia / Moreno-García, Marta / Mrdjic, Nemanja / Onar, Vedat / Oueslati, Tarek / Parrag, Marcus / Pino Uria, Beatriz / Romagnoli, Guiseppe / Rugge, Michela / Salari, Leonardo / Saliari, Konstantina / Santos, Ana Beatriz / Schmölcke, Ulrich / Sforzi, Andrea / Soranna, Gabriele / Spassov, Nikolai / Tagliacozzo, Antonio / Tinè, Vincenzo / Trixl, Simon / Vukovic-Bogdanović, Sonja / Wierer, Ursula / Wilkens, Barbara / Doherty, Sean / Sykes, Naomi / Frantz, Laurent A. F. / Matucci, Federica / Caniglia, Romolo / Larson, Greger / Peters, Joris / van Neer, Wim / Ottoni, Claudio (2025): The dispersal of domestic cats from North Africa to Europe around 2000 years ago. – Science 390:eadt2642, 1-12
Abstract
The domestic cat (Felis catus) descends from the African wildcat Felis lybica lybica . Its global distribution alongside humans testifies to its successful adaptation to anthropogenic environments. Uncertainty remains regarding whether domestic cats originated in the Levant, Egypt, or elsewhere in the natural range of African wildcats. The timing and circumstances of their dispersal into Europe are also unknown. In this study, the analysis of 87 ancient and modern cat genomes suggests that domestic cats did not spread to Europe with Neolithic farmers. Conversely, they were introduced to Europe around 2000 years ago, probably from North Africa. In addition, a separate earlier introduction (first millennium before the common era) of wildcats from Northwest Africa may have been responsible for the present-day wild population in Sardinia.
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DOI: 10.1126/science.adt2642
Preprint available at www.bioRxiv.org.
De Martino, Marco / de Cupere, Bea / Rovelli, Valentina / Serventi, Patrizia / Mouraud, Betty / Baldoni, Marica / Di Corcia, Tullia / Geiger, Sheila / Alhaique, Francesca / Alves, Paulo C. / Buitenhuis, Hijlke / Ceccaroni, Emanuela / Cerilli, E. / De Grossi Mazzorin, Jacopo / Detry, Cleia / Dowd, Marion / Fiore, Ivana / Gourichon, Lionel / Grau-Sologestoa, Idoia / Küchelmann, Hans Christian / Kunst, Günther Karl / McCarthy, Margaret / Miccichè, Roberto Maria / Minniti, Claudia / Moreno-García, Marta / Mrdjic, Nemanja / Onar, Vedat / Oueslati, Tarek / Parrag, Marcus / Pino Uria, Beatriz / Romagnoli, Guiseppe / Rugge, Michela / Salari, Leonardo / Saliari, Konstantina / Santos, Ana Beatriz / Schmölcke, Ulrich / Sforzi, Andrea / Soranna, Gabriele / Spassov, Nikolai / Tagliacozzo, Antonio / Tinè, Vincenzo / Trixl, Simon / Vukovic-Bogdanović, Sonja / Wierer, Ursula / Wilkens, Barbara / Doherty, Sean / Sykes, Naomi / Frantz, Laurent A. F. / Matucci, Federica / Caniglia, Romolo / Larson, Greger / Peters, Joris / van Neer, Wim / Ottoni, Claudio (2025): The dispersal of domestic cats from North Africa to Europe around 2000 years ago. – Science 390:eadt2642, 1-12
Abstract
The domestic cat (Felis catus) descends from the African wildcat Felis lybica lybica . Its global distribution alongside humans testifies to its successful adaptation to anthropogenic environments. Uncertainty remains regarding whether domestic cats originated in the Levant, Egypt, or elsewhere in the natural range of African wildcats. The timing and circumstances of their dispersal into Europe are also unknown. In this study, the analysis of 87 ancient and modern cat genomes suggests that domestic cats did not spread to Europe with Neolithic farmers. Conversely, they were introduced to Europe around 2000 years ago, probably from North Africa. In addition, a separate earlier introduction (first millennium before the common era) of wildcats from Northwest Africa may have been responsible for the present-day wild population in Sardinia.
Download (2,0 MB)
DOI: 10.1126/science.adt2642
Preprint available at www.bioRxiv.org.