Times Colonist

Study follows spread of cats

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NEW YORK — Long before cats became the darlings of Facebook and YouTube, they spread through the ancient human world.

A DNA study reached back thousands of years to track that conquest and found evidence of two major dispersals from the Middle East, in which people evidently took cats with them. Genetic signatures the felines had on those journeys are still seen in most modern-day breeds.

Researcher­s analyzed DNA from 209 ancient cats as old as 9,000 years from Europe, Africa and Asia, including some ancient Egyptian cat mummies.

“They are direct witnesses of the situation in the past,” said Eva-Maria Geigl of the Jacques Monod Institute in Paris. She and colleagues also looked at 28 modern feral cats from Bulgaria and east Africa.

It’s the latest glimpse into the complicate­d story of domesticat­ed cats. They are descendant­s of wild ancestors that learned to live with people and became relatively tame — though some cat owners would say that nowadays, they don’t always seem enthusiast­ic about our company.

The domesticat­ion process may have begun around 10,000 years ago when people settled in the Fertile Crescent, the archshaped region that includes the eastern shore of the Mediterran­ean Sea and land around the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. They stored grain, which drew rodents, which in turn attracted wild cats. Animal remains in trash heaps might have attracted them, too. Over time, these wild felines adapted to this man-made environmen­t and got used to hanging around people.

A previous study had found a cat buried alongside a human some 9,500 years ago in Cyprus, an island without any native population of felines. That indicates the cat was brought by boat and it had some special relationsh­ip to that person, researcher­s say.

Cats were clearly tame by about 3,500 years ago in Egypt, where paintings often placed them beneath chairs. That shows by that time, “the cat makes its way to the household,” said Geigl. But the overall domesticat­ion process has been hard for scientists to track, in part because fossil skeletons don’t reveal whether a cat was wild or domesticat­ed.

It’s easier to distinguis­h dogs, our first domesticat­ed animal, from their wolf ancestors. Dogs evolved from wolves that had begun to associate with people even before farming began.

The new study tracked the spread of specific cat DNA markers over long distances through time, a sign that people had taken cats with them. Results were released Monday by the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution.

The study “strengthen­s and refines previous work,” said Carlos Driscoll of the Wildlife Institute of India. The extensive sampling of cat DNA going back so far in time is unpreceden­ted, he said.

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