4.6 Review

The role of humans in facilitating and sustaining coat colour variation in domestic animals

Journal

SEMINARS IN CELL & DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 6-7, Pages 587-593

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.semcdb.2013.03.015

Keywords

MC1R; Selection; Animal breeding

Funding

  1. NERC [NE/H005552/1, NE/K003259/1, NE/K005243/1, NE/H005269/1, NE/F003382/1, NE/F003382/2] Funding Source: UKRI
  2. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/H005269/1, NE/H005552/1, NE/F003382/1, NE/K005243/1, NE/F003382/2, NE/K003259/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Though the process of domestication results in a wide variety of novel phenotypic and behavioural traits, coat colour variation is one of the few characteristics that distinguishes all domestic animals from their wild progenitors. A number of recent reviews have discussed and synthesised the hundreds of genes known to underlie specific coat colour patterns in a wide range of domestic animals. This review expands upon those studies by asking how what is known about the causative mutations associated with variable coat colours, can be used to address three specific questions related to the appearance of non wild-type coat colours in domestic animals. Firstly, is it possible that coat colour variation resulted as a by-product of an initial selection for tameness during the early phases of domestication? Secondly, how soon after the process began did domestic animals display coat colour variation? Lastly, what evidence is there that intentional human selection, rather than drift, is primarily responsible for the wide range of modern coat colours? By considering the presence and absence of coat colour genes within the context of the different pathways animals travelled from wild to captive populations, we conclude that coat colour variability was probably not a pleiotropic effect of the selection for tameness, that coat colours most likely appeared very soon after the domestication process began, and that humans have been actively selecting for colour novelty and thus allowing for the proliferation of new mutations in coat colour genes. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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