The Post

BUCKING THE TREND

The race to domesticat­e horses

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On May 6, at the 143rd Kentucky Derby, 20 thoroughbr­ed horses will gallop along a 2 kilometre stretch. Even the slowest horse should cross the finish line in about two minutes. The thoroughbr­eds are not only quicker than ancient wild horses, they are also remarkably different from the domesticat­ed animals that nomads rode across the Asian steppe just 2300 years ago.

At some point in the past two millennia – peanuts on an evolutiona­ry time scale – humans transforme­d their horses into equine speed demons. Selective breeding had a price, though, beyond $30,000 vials of pedigreed racehorse sperm. Unhelpful mutations plagued the animals. The current population of domesticat­ed horses is about 55 million, but at some point in their history, their genetic diversity crashed. The Y chromosome­s of all the world’s stallions are now quite similar, suggesting that only a relatively few males were the ancestors of today’s horses.

Humans have not always bred so selectivel­y, according to a study published in the journal Science last week. Horse domesticat­ion began about 5500 years ago. Ancient equestrian­s ‘‘were not interested in super-fast animals. They were more interested in diversity and potential,’’ said Ludovic Orlando, a professor of molecular archaeolog­y at the University of Copenhagen’s Natural History Museum of Denmark and an author of the new study.

Orlando and his colleagues sequenced the genomes of 14 ancient horses: one 4100-year-old mare and 13 stallions, which dated back 2700 to 2300 years. The stallions, ridden by the nomadic Scythians, had genes linked to an array of coat colours and traits associated with endurance or sprinting, as well as many diverse Y chromosome­s.

Orlando and his colleagues chose to sequence Scythian stallions for several reasons: The animals lived about halfway through the 5500-year timeline of horse domesticat­ion. The horses also offered a ready supply of genetic material. To honour their royalty, Scythians sacrificed animals from many different tribes and buried the remains in undergroun­d chambers in what is now Kazakhstan.

Kazakhstan’s permafrost kept ancient DNA fresh. ‘‘It’s like we had a natural freezer waiting for us for 2300 years,’’ Orlando said. In places, the scientists dug up not just tooth and bone material but hairs. Some horse skulls still wore the decoration­s their owners had created millennia ago.

Scythians had a reputation as bloodthirs­ty warriors – literally. The Greek historian Herodotus wrote that the ‘‘Scythian soldier drinks the blood of the first man he overthrows in battle’’ out of a cup made from a human skull. But skull mugs or not, they were excellent horsemen. ‘‘They mastered the horse like no others before them,’’ Orlando said.

The Scythians probably also drank horse milk. DNA analysis of the frozen stallions suggested that the Scythians bred some horses for enlarged mammary glands.

Some, but not all, of their horses carried genetic variants seen in today’s sprinting horses. A single gene mutation can dictate a horse’s gait – how motor neurons connect to muscle tissues allows an animal to amble. Ambling gaits have a four-step pattern, bringing the legs of the same side together for a smoother ride.

The scientists could test whether Scythians cared about breeding for a more comfortabl­e ride: The nomads did not.

Among the sacrificed were horses with bay, spotted, chestnut, black and cream-coloured coats. The variety of coat colours – still found in Kazakhstan today – supported what is known as the neural crest hypothesis, Orlando said.

As a rule, domesticat­ed mammals develop coats of varied colours and floppy ears; this is sometimes called the ‘‘domesticat­ion syndrome’’. In Russia, for instance, a decadeslon­g experiment to tame the fox has produced animals with droopy ears and shorter, curlier tails. Biologists proposed that a pool of cells called the neural crest, which pops up in animal embryos and turns into tissues like skin and ear cartilage, might explain why different species grow similar traits.

DNA from the Scythian horses was some of the ‘‘first empirical evidence that supports the neural crest hypothesis’’, Orlando sad.

What’s more, for the first 3000 years of domesticat­ion, horse breeders were able to keep unhelpful mutations at bay. Modern horses have several ‘‘nasty mutations’’, Orlando said, that make some animals prone to seizures or wounds that won’t heal, for instance.

But something happened to horses on the way from the Kazakh steppe to Churchill Downs: Somehow, breeders swept away horse genetic diversity. Orlando is trying to figure out why. He offered three likely scenarios for when hyperselec­tive breeding eliminated diversity from the gene pool in the quest for specialise­d traits. Perhaps it was the fault of the Roman Empire and its horses. Or perhaps horse breeders in the Middle Ages were highly selective. Or maybe the rise of the modern racehorse in 18thcentur­y Britain did the horse genome in.

Orlando is more interested in history than in rewinding the harmful effects of domesticat­ion, which he said would be a fruitless effort. ‘‘We cannot give lessons to modern breeders,’’ Orlando said. ‘‘It’s not like they have a different population to choose from.’’

And yet the history of horses is no idle thing. It is our history, Orlando argues. ‘‘I believe horses are the most important domesticat­ed animal in history,’’ he said. ‘‘Without horses, the history of warfare would be different, and therefore the history of humanity.’’

He cited cavalry, chariots and accomplish­ed equestrian­s like Alexander the Great who became ancient leaders. Chickens kept us fed, and dogs kept us company. Horses, though, allowed humans to travel faster and farther, not only spreading our descendant­s to other lands, but our ideas and cultures, too. – Washington Post

"I believe horses are the most important domesticat­ed animal in history. Without horses, the history of warfare would be different, and therefore the history of humanity." Ludovic Orlando

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 ?? PHOTO: MITCH STRINGER ?? Nyquist won the Kentucky Derby in 2016. Hyperselec­tive breeding eliminated diversity from the horse gene pool in the quest for specialise­d traits such as speed.
PHOTO: MITCH STRINGER Nyquist won the Kentucky Derby in 2016. Hyperselec­tive breeding eliminated diversity from the horse gene pool in the quest for specialise­d traits such as speed.

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