Neanderthals may have gone extinct because of their small population size
Washington, July 17 (ANI): New genetic evidence suggests that Neanderthals went extinct because of their small population size.
According to a report in Live science, new genetic evidence from the remains of six Neanderthals suggests the population hovered at an average of 1,500 females of reproductive age in Europe between 38,000 and 70,000 years ago, with the maximum estimate of 3,500 such female Neanderthals.
"It seems they never really took off in Eurasia in the way modern humans did later," said study researcher Adrian Briggs of the Max-Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany.
The research suggests the small population size of our ancestral cousins may have been a factor in their demise.
"Because there never really were millions of them, they probably were more susceptible to some event that made them go extinct, which to me, suspiciously coincides with the emergence of modern humans," Briggs told Live Science.
The study "does support notions that toward the end of last ice age, the Neanderthal population was declining as a result of harsh circumstances," said Ian Tattersall, curator of anthropology at the American Museum of Natural History in New York.
The Neanderthals inhabited the plains of Europe and parts of Asia as far back as 230,000 years ago.
They disappeared from the fossil record more than 20,000 years ago, a few thousand years after modern humans appeared on the scene.
Figuring out why Neanderthals died out and what they were like when alive have kept plenty of scientists busy.
Briggs and his colleagues used a new method that targets the genetic material of interest, analyzing so-called mitochondrial DNA from the fossils of six Neanderthals, who lived between 38,000 and 70,000 years ago.
That genetic material comes from females and so can be used to trace maternal lineages.
To get a sense of the genetic diversity, and ultimately population size, the team compared the Neanderthal sequences with one another.
Then, the researchers looked at such genetic information from 50 living humans from around the world, asking, "how different are their genes from one another?"
The Neanderthals had about three times less genetic diversity than the modern humans.
According to Briggs, the entire population could be roughly estimated by doubling the number of females, which they set at no higher than 3,500.
In addition, the sequenced genetic material from the Neanderthals did not support any interbreeding among Neanderthals and modern humans.
"However, with such a small Neanderthal population, even if interbreeding occurred, the few Neanderthal genes thrown into the mix could've been sort of diluted out over time," Briggs said. (ANI)
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