PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Weak Genetic Structure in Northern African Dromedary Camels Reflects Their Unique Evolutionary History.

  • Youcef Amine Cherifi,
  • Suheil Bechir Semir Gaouar,
  • Rosangela Guastamacchia,
  • Khalid Ahmed El-Bahrawy,
  • Asmaa Mohammed Aly Abushady,
  • Abdoallah Aboelnasr Sharaf,
  • Derradji Harek,
  • Giovanni Michele Lacalandra,
  • Nadhira Saïdi-Mehtar,
  • Elena Ciani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0168672
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. e0168672

Abstract

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Knowledge on genetic diversity and structure of camel populations is fundamental for sustainable herd management and breeding program implementation in this species. Here we characterized a total of 331 camels from Northern Africa, representative of six populations and thirteen Algerian and Egyptian geographic regions, using 20 STR markers. The nineteen polymorphic loci displayed an average of 9.79 ± 5.31 alleles, ranging from 2 (CVRL8) to 24 (CVRL1D). Average He was 0.647 ± 0.173. Eleven loci deviated significantly from Hardy-Weinberg proportions (P<0.05), due to excess of homozygous genotypes in all cases except one (CMS18). Distribution of genetic diversity along a weak geographic gradient as suggested by network analysis was not supported by either unsupervised and supervised Bayesian clustering. Traditional extensive/nomadic herding practices, together with the historical use as a long-range beast of burden and its peculiar evolutionary history, with domestication likely occurring from a bottlenecked and geographically confined wild progenitor, may explain the observed genetic patterns.