AI Article Synopsis

  • Domestic animals have significant economic, cultural, and practical importance, shaping human civilization while sharing ancestral ties with wild relatives.
  • There is a growing concern about the genetic status of these ancestral forms, particularly as they face threats from hybridization with domesticated species and potential extinction.
  • To effectively conserve these ancestral animals, more research is needed into their genetics, behavior, and ecology, which will provide essential data for successful conservation strategies.

Article Abstract

Domestic animals have immense economic, cultural, and practical value and have played pivotal roles in the development of human civilization. Many domesticates have, among their wild relatives, undomesticated forms representative of their ancestors. Resurgent interest in these ancestral forms has highlighted the unclear genetic status of many, and some are threatened with extinction by hybridization with domestic conspecifics. We considered the contemporary status of these ancestral forms relative to their scientific, practical, and ecological importance; the varied impacts of wild-domestic hybridization; and the challenges and potential resolutions involved in conservation efforts. Identifying and conserving ancestral forms, particularly with respect to disentangling patterns of gene flow from domesticates, is complex because of the lack of available genomic and phenotypic baselines. Comparative behavioral, ecological, and genetic studies of ancestral-type, feral, and domestic animals should be prioritized to establish the contemporary status of the former. Such baseline information will be fundamental in ensuring successful conservation efforts.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cobi.13867DOI Listing

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