Abstract

Dogs accompanied people in their migrations across the Pacific Ocean and ultimately reached New Zealand, which is the southern-most point of their oceanic distribution, around the beginning of the fourteenth century AD. Previous ancient DNA analyses of mitochondrial control region sequences indicated the New Zealand dog population included two lineages. We sequenced complete mitochondrial genomes of fourteen dogs from the colonisation era archaeological site of Wairau Bar and found five closely-related haplotypes. The limited number of mitochondrial lineages present at Wairau Bar suggests that the founding population may have comprised only a few dogs; or that the arriving dogs were closely related. For populations such as that at Wairau Bar, which stemmed from relatively recent migration events, control region sequences have insufficient power to address questions about population structure and founding events. Sequencing mitogenomes provided the opportunity to observe sufficient diversity to discriminate between individuals that would otherwise be assigned the same haplotype and to clarify their relationships with each other. Our results also support the proposition that at least one dispersal of dogs into the Pacific was via a south-western route through Indonesia.

Highlights

  • Dogs are found in human communities throughout the world where they may be companions, working dogs or co-inhabitants of villages

  • Dogs from Wairau Bar likely represent part of the initial population of dogs introduced to New Zealand, having arrived with people around the beginning of the fourteenth century AD [17]

  • We observed five different mitochondrial haplotypes, which may have contributed to the establishment of the dog population of New Zealand

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Summary

Introduction

Dogs are found in human communities throughout the world where they may be companions, working dogs or co-inhabitants of villages They have a special place in human history as the first domesticated animal, having appeared in the archaeological record around 15,000 years ago, well in advance of other domesticates [1]. Since this time they have successfully moved with people across the globe, including through the islands of Oceania. Recent trends in dog keeping, the rise in intensive breeding for particular physical characteristics, lie as a veneer over a much longer and more complex relationship between dogs and people. Near Oceania includes the large island of Papua New Guinea, the Bismarck Archipelago, and the Solomon Islands, and has evidence of human occupation that

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