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RESEARCH PRODUCT

How Geography and Climate Shaped the Genomic Diversity of Italian Local Cattle and Sheep Breeds

Gabriele SenczukAndrea CriscioneSalvatore MastrangeloFilippo BiscariniDonata MarlettaFabio PillaDenis LaloëRoberta Ciampolini

subject

sheepsheep.General Veterinaryredundancy analysiscilmategeographySettore AGR/17 - Zootecnica Generale E Miglioramento Genetico[SDV.GEN.GA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Animal geneticscattleredundancy analysiAnimal Science and Zoologycattle; sheep; genome; cilmate; geography; redundancy analysisclimategenome

description

International audience; Understanding the relationships among geography, climate, and genetics is increasingly important for animal farming and breeding. In this study, we examine these inter-relationships in the context of local cattle and sheep breeds distributed along the Italian territory. To this aim, we used redundancy analysis on genomic data from previous projects combined with geographical coordinates and corresponding climatic data. The effect of geographic factors (latitude and longitude) was more important in sheep (26.4%) than that in cattle (13.8%). Once geography had been partialled out of analysis, 10.1% of cattle genomic diversity and 13.3% of that of sheep could be ascribed to climatic effects. Stronger geographic effects in sheep can be related to a combination of higher pre-domestication genetic variability together with biological and productive specificities. Climate alone seems to have had less impact on current genetic diversity in both species, even if climate and geography are greatly confounded. Results confirm that both species are the result of complex evolutionary histories triggered by interactions between human needs and environmental conditions.

10.3390/ani12172198https://hal.science/hal-03772167