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Sociocultural Behavior, Sex-Biased Admixture, and Effective Population Sizes in Central African Pygmies and Non-Pygmies

机译:中非俾格米人和非俾格米人的社会文化行为、性别偏见混合和有效人口规模

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摘要

Sociocultural phenomena, such as exogamy or phylopatry, can largely determine human sex-specific demography. In Central Africa, diverging patterns of sex-specific genetic variation have been observed between mobile hunter–gatherer Pygmies and sedentary agricultural non-Pygmies. However, their sex-specific demography remains largely unknown. Using population genetics and approximate Bayesian computation approaches, we inferred male and female effective population sizes, sex-specific migration, and admixture rates in 23 Central African Pygmy and non-Pygmy populations, genotyped for autosomal, X-linked, Y-linked, and mitochondrial markers. We found much larger effective population sizes and migration rates among non-Pygmy populations than among Pygmies, in agreement with the recent expansions and migrations of non-Pygmies and, conversely, the isolation and stationary demography of Pygmy groups. We found larger effective sizes and migration rates for males than for females for Pygmies, and vice versa for non-Pygmies. Thus, although most Pygmy populations have patrilocal customs, their sex-specific genetic patterns resemble those of matrilocal populations. In fact, our results are consistent with a lower prevalence of polygyny and patrilocality in Pygmies compared with non-Pygmies and a potential female transmission of reproductive success in Pygmies. Finally, Pygmy populations showed variable admixture levels with the non-Pygmies, with often much larger introgression from male than from female lineages. Social discrimination against Pygmies triggering complex movements of spouses in intermarriages can explain these male-biased admixture patterns in a patrilocal context. We show how gender-related sociocultural phenomena can determine highly variable sex-specific demography among populations, and how population genetic approaches contrasting chromosomal types allow inferring detailed human sex-specific demographic history.
机译:社会文化现象,如外婚制或植物学,可以在很大程度上决定人类特定性别的人口统计学。在中非,在流动的狩猎采集俾格米人和久坐不动的农业非俾格米人之间观察到了性别特异性遗传变异的不同模式。然而,他们的性别特定人口统计学在很大程度上仍然未知。使用群体遗传学和近似贝叶斯计算方法,我们推断了 23 个中非俾格米人和非俾格米人群体的男性和女性有效群体规模、性别特异性迁移和混合率,这些群体对常染色体、X 连锁、Y 连锁和线粒体标记进行了基因分型。我们发现非俾格米人群体的有效人口规模和迁移率比俾格米人大得多,这与最近非俾格米人的扩张和迁移以及相反的俾格米群体的孤立和静止人口统计一致。我们发现,对于俾格米人来说,雄性的有效体型和迁徙率大于雌性,反之亦然。因此,尽管大多数俾格米人都有父系习俗,但他们的性别特异性遗传模式与母系人口相似。事实上,我们的研究结果与非俾格米人相比,俾格米人一夫多妻制和父权制的患病率较低,以及俾格米人生殖成功的潜在女性传播是一致的。最后,俾格米人种群与非俾格米人表现出不同的混合水平,男性的渗入通常比女性血统的渗入要大得多。对俾格米人的社会歧视引发了配偶在通婚中的复杂流动,可以解释父权制背景下的这些男性偏见的混合模式。我们展示了与性别相关的社会文化现象如何决定人群中高度可变的性别特异性人口统计学,以及对比染色体类型的群体遗传方法如何能够推断出详细的人类性别特异性人口统计学历史。

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