PLoS ONE (Jan 2011)

Bonobos fall within the genomic variation of chimpanzees.

  • Anne Fischer,
  • Kay Prüfer,
  • Jeffrey M Good,
  • Michel Halbwax,
  • Victor Wiebe,
  • Claudine André,
  • Rebeca Atencia,
  • Lawrence Mugisha,
  • Susan E Ptak,
  • Svante Pääbo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0021605
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 6
p. e21605

Abstract

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To gain insight into the patterns of genetic variation and evolutionary relationships within and between bonobos and chimpanzees, we sequenced 150,000 base pairs of nuclear DNA divided among 15 autosomal regions as well as the complete mitochondrial genomes from 20 bonobos and 58 chimpanzees. Except for western chimpanzees, we found poor genetic separation of chimpanzees based on sample locality. In contrast, bonobos consistently cluster together but fall as a group within the variation of chimpanzees for many of the regions. Thus, while chimpanzees retain genomic variation that predates bonobo-chimpanzee speciation, extensive lineage sorting has occurred within bonobos such that much of their genome traces its ancestry back to a single common ancestor that postdates their origin as a group separate from chimpanzees.