Male Neanderthals more often paired with human women, new study finds

1 min read
Source: Live Science
Male Neanderthals more often paired with human women, new study finds
Photo: Live Science
TL;DR Summary

A new Science study finds interbreeding between Neanderthals and modern humans was strongly sex-biased, with mating preferentially between male Neanderthals and female Homo sapiens. This bias helps explain the “Neanderthal deserts” on the human genome, especially the scarcity of Neanderthal DNA on the X chromosome, and why Neanderthal genes are unevenly distributed across non-African populations. Analyzing genomes from African populations with no Neanderthal ancestry and comparing them to Neanderthal genomes, the researchers conclude mate preference best accounts for the pattern, while noting that other evolutionary factors may also have contributed and that future work will explore Neanderthal social structures.

Share this article

Reading Insights

Total Reads

0

Unique Readers

4

Time Saved

98 min

vs 99 min read

Condensed

99%

19,60599 words

Want the full story? Read the original article

Read on Live Science