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Author Topic: Domestication of the Cat  (Read 159 times)
Description: Mankind tames the wild
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Solomon
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« on: June 29, 2007, 08:23:45 AM »


The lion-headed goddess Sekhmet rules over the fate of humanity
This large amulet of the goddess of healing was probably worn by either a physician, or an ill individual. An inscription on her back reads: lady of health, beloved of the god Ptah (her husband).

All civilisation is based on agricultural surpluses and the basis of that is selective breeding - plants and animals - and our taming of the wild. Our historical relationships with the horse, dog and cat can therefore be seen as a part of that story.

I start with a series of stories from the last few years.

Cats in ancient Egypt

Cats (Felis catus) played a large role in ancient Egyptian society. Beginning as a wild, untamed species, cats were useful for keeping down vermin populations in the Egyptians' crops and harvests; through exposure to humans, the cat population became domesticated over time and learned to coexist with the human population. The people inhabiting the area which would later become unified and known as Upper and Lower Egypt had a religion centering around the worship of animals, of which the cat became one.

Originally praised for its aid to humans in controlling vermin and its ability to fight and kill snakes (such as cobras), the domesticated cat slowly became a symbol of grace and poise. The goddess Mafdet, the deification of justice and execution, was a fierce lion-headed goddess. The cat goddess Bast (also known as Bastet) eventually replaced the cult of Mafdet, and Bast's image softened over time and she became the deity representing protection, fertility, and motherhood.

As a revered animal and one very important to Egyptian society and religion, the cat was afforded the same mummification after death as humans were. Mummified cats were given in offering to Bast; in 1888, an Egyptian farmer accidentally uncovered a large tomb containing tens of thousands of mummified cats and kittens. This discovery outside the town of Beni Hasan contained around eighty thousand cat mummies, dating back to 1000-2000 BCE.
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Solomon
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« Reply #1 on: June 29, 2007, 08:27:20 AM »

New cat family tree revealed
Modern cats have their roots in Asia 11 million years ago, according to a DNA study of wild and domestic cats.

The ancient ancestors of the 37 species alive today migrated across the globe, eventually settling in all continents except Antarctica, say scientists.

Eight major lineages emerged, including lions, ocelots and domestic cats.

The moggy is most closely related to the African and European wild cat and the Chinese desert cat, an international team reports in Science.

Warren Johnson of the National Cancer Institute in Frederick, Maryland, US, led the study.

He said they were able to trace the ancestry of all living cat species back to South East Asia some 11 million years ago.

 In a relatively small number of migrations, cats spread across the world, as land bridges sprang up between continents.

It turns out that the domestic cat is most closely related to the wild cats of Africa, Europe and China.

"You can take a look at your cat, that you share so much of your life with, and imagine that in the relatively recent evolutionary past, it was connected and related to species such as the European wild cat," Dr Johnson told the BBC News website.

"We now have a much better idea of where the domestic cat fits in with all of the 36 wild species and what ecological and geographical events led to the development of each one of these species," he added.

"Through that we have a much better understanding of what makes a domestic cat a cat and what evolutionary event distinguished the domestic cat from its ancestor and what it retains today."


The Near Eastern Origin of Cat Domestication
 Carlos A. Driscoll 1*,  Marilyn Menotti-Raymond 2,  Alfred L. Roca 3,  Karsten Hupe 4,  Warren E. Johnson 2,  Eli Geffen 5,  Eric Harley 6,  Miguel Delibes 7,  Dominique Pontier 8,  Andrew C. Kitchener 9,  Nobuyuki Yamaguchi 10,  Stephen J. O'Brien 2*,  David Macdonald 10*

1 Laboratory of Genomic Diversity, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, MD 21702, USA; Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK.
2 Laboratory of Genomic Diversity, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, MD 21702, USA.
3 Laboratory of Genomic Diversity, SAIC-Frederick Inc., NCI-Frederick, Frederick, MD 21702, USA.
4 Jagd Einrichtungs B�ro, Am Sahlbach 9a, 37170 F�rstenhagen, Germany.
5 Department of Zoology, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel.
6 Division of Chemical Pathology, University of Cape Town, Observatory 7925, Cape Town, South Africa.
7 Department of Applied Biology, Estaci�n Biol�gica de Do�ana, CSIC, Avda Maria Luisa s/n Pabell�n del Per�, 41013 Sevilla, Spain.
8 UMR-CNRS 5558 Biom�trie et Biologie Evolutive, Universit� Claude Bernard Lyon I, 43 boulevard du 11 novembre 1918, 69622 Villeurbanne, France.
9 Department of Geology and Zoology, National Museums of Scotland, Edinburgh EH1 1JF, Scotland, UK.
10 Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Carlos A. Driscoll , E-mail:
Stephen J. O'Brien , E-mail:
David Macdonald , E-mail:

The world's domestic cats carry patterns of sequence variation in their genome that reflect a history of domestication and breed development. A genetic assessment of 979 domestic cats and their wild progenitors (Felis silvestris silvestris - European wildcat; F. s. lybica - Near Eastern wildcat; F. s. ornata - Central Asian wildcat; F. s. cafra - sub Saharan African wildcat; and F. s. bieti - Chinese desert cat) indicated that each wild group represents a distinctive subspecies of Felis silvestris. Further analysis revealed that cats were domesticated in the Near East, likely coincident with agricultural village development in the Fertile Crescent. Domestic cats derive from at least five founders from across this region, whose descendents were subsequently transported across the world by human assistance.
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Solomon
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« Reply #2 on: June 29, 2007, 08:30:43 AM »


Egyptian picture of a cat guarding geese, circa 1120 B.C.E.

DNA traces origin of domestic cat
Domestic cats around the world can trace their origins back to the Middle East's Fertile Crescent, according to a genetic study in Science journal.

They may have been domesticated by early farming communities, experts say.

The study suggests the progenitors of today's cats split from their wild counterparts more than 100,000 years ago - much earlier than once thought.

At least five female ancestors from the region gave rise to all the domestic cats alive today, scientists believe.

DNA evidence suggests that, apart from accidental cross-breeding, European wildcats are not part of the domestic moggy's family tree.

Neither are the Central Asian wildcat, the Southern African wildcat, or the Chinese desert cat.

Ancient evidence
The earliest archaeological evidence of cat domestication dates back 9,500 years, when cats were thought to have lived alongside humans in settlement sites in Cyprus.

However, the new results show the house cat lineage is far older. Ancestors of domestic cats are now thought to have broken away from their wild relatives and started living with humans as early as 130,000 years ago.

The researchers focused on DNA in the mitochondria, the power plants of cells which supply energy and have their own genetic material.

Comparison of the genetic sequences enabled researchers to determine the relationships between different cat lineages.

The scientists found the cats fell into distinctive genetic "clades", or groups.

One of the clades included domestic cats and some wildcats from the Middle East, suggesting that today's moggy stems from the wild felines of this region.

Experts believe cats originally sought out human company, attracted by rodents infesting the first agricultural settlements.

The early farmers of the fertile crescent - present-day Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Israel - would have found the animals extremely useful for protecting their grain stores - an association that continues to this day.

"The felidae family is well known as a successful predator - very deadly, very ferocious, very threatening to all species including humankind," said co-author Stephen O'Brien, of the US National Cancer Institute.

"But this little guy actually chose not to be that," he said, "he actually chose to be a little bit friendly and also was a very good mouser."

The study included researchers from the UK, the US, Germany, Israel, Spain and France.


A Fertile Domestication of Cats
By Constance Holden
ScienceNOW Daily News
28 June 2007
Cats will always remain mysterious animals--but exactly where they came from is no longer a riddle. A genetic study has shown that the ancestors of all of today's domestic cats prowled the Near East. The work bolsters the notion that cats became useful to humans when agriculture started--which scientists believe happened in the Near East--forcing people to protect grain stores from rodents.

"There's been an awful lot of guesswork on how one of the most interesting experiments in natural history took place," says Stephen J. O'Brien, chief of the Laboratory of Genomic Diversity at the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, an author on the study. Based on morphology, scientists already presumed that wildcats--as opposed to other species such as ocelots and pumas--were the progenitors of today's pussycats. The controversy, O'Brien says, concerned where domestication occurred and how many times it might have happened.

Wildcats are a single Old World species. Five subspecies live in Europe, sub-Saharan Africa, China, Central Asia, and the Near East. The researchers collected genetic material from 979 modern-day cats, domestic and wild, from three continents. Their analysis indicates that the common ancestors of all domesticated cats lived in the Near East some 130,000 years ago. They were wildcats living in the Fertile Crescent--the area extending from the Eastern Mediterranean around Turkey and down into Mesopotamia--"exactly the place where humanity settled down to agriculture ten to twelve thousand years ago," says O'Brien. The team found five lineages of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in modern felines. Because of this variation, the researchers believe domestication occurred a half-dozen times or so in the Middle East.

This analysis fits with the oldest archaeological evidence for cat domestication--in 2001, scientists in Cyprus unearthed a cat skeleton that had been buried with a human 9500 years ago (Science, 9 April 2004, p. 189). It also fits with the fact that "domestication of pretty much everything else in the world came from the Fertile Crescent," says Carlos Driscoll of Oxford University, U.K., the first author on the study, which appeared online in Science today.

Geneticist Robert Wayne of the University of California, Los Angeles, says, "the data are very convincing." He says it's noteworthy that domestication took place in a relatively limited area, since animals such as pigs, cattle, and horses usually show more complex origins. "This suggests that cats were domesticated for a geographically specific purpose--maintaining rodent free grain stores--unique to the Fertile Crescent," he says.

The next puzzle, says O'Brien, is locating the genetic mutations responsible for making cats tame. Finding these "tameness genes" is one of the goals of a cat genome project currently being conducted by a consortium that O'Brien leads.
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Solomon
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« Reply #3 on: June 29, 2007, 08:34:59 AM »


The cats at Shillourokambos may have been like this African wildcat

Dig discovery is oldest 'pet cat'
The oldest known evidence of people keeping cats as pets may have been found by archaeologists.

The discovery of a cat buried with what could be its owner in a Neolithic grave on Cyprus suggests domestication of cats had begun 9,500 years ago.

It was thought the Egyptians were first to domesticate cats, with the earliest evidence dating to 2,000-1,900 BC.

French researchers writing in Science magazine show that the process actually began much earlier than that.

The evidence comes from the Neolithic, or late stone age, village of Shillourokambos on Cyprus, which was inhabited from the 9th to the 8th millennia BC.


The cat (top) was killed to be buried together with its "master" (bottom)

Cat culture

"The cat we found in the grave may have been pre-domesticated - something in between savage and domestic. Alternatively, it's possible it was really domestic," Professor Jean Guilaine, of the CNRS Centre d'Anthropologie in Toulouse, France, told BBC News Online.

Burial, Science
The cat (top) was killed to be buried together with its "master" (bottom)
"We have this situation of the person and the cat. This same situation of men and dogs are known much earlier from the Natufian culture of Israel which dates to 12-11,000 BC."

The complete cat skeleton was found about 40cm from a human burial. The similar states of preservation and positions of the burials in the ground suggest the person and the cat were buried together.

The person, who is about 30 years of age, but of unknown sex, was buried with offerings such as polished stone, axes, flint tools and ochre pigment.

Based on this the researchers argue that the person was of high status and may have had a special relationship with cats. Cats might have had religious as well as material significance to the Stone Age Cypriots, the French archaeologists add.
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Tags: cat feline domestication 
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