Texarkana Gazette

At long last, a donkey family tree

- FRANZ LIDZ AND SAMUEL ARANDA NYTIMES NEWS SERVICE

The donkey is a key, if increasing­ly marginaliz­ed, character in human history. Once venerated, the animal has been an object of ridicule for so long that the word “asinine” — derived from the Latin asinus, meaning “like an ass or a donkey” — means “stupid.” Donkeys and donkey work are essential to the livelihood­s of people in developing countries, but elsewhere donkeys have all but disappeare­d.

“I guess that we simply forgot the importance of this animal, probably being blown away by the impact of its close cousin, the horse,” said Ludovic Orlando, director of the Center for Anthropobi­ology and Genomics of Toulouse in France. “In Europe, the horse provided fast mobility and helped grow crops and make war. I am not sure we can claim that the impact of the donkey was as large.” Compared with horses and dogs, donkeys have received relatively little attention from archaeolog­ists, much less geneticist­s.

Nonetheles­s, despite this being the Year of the Rabbit according to the Chinese zodiac, it might just be the Year of the Donkey. The Oscar-nominated film “EO” features as its hero a soulful, barbarousl­y misused donkey. And donkeys star in a major new genetic study published in the journal Science; Peter Mitchell, an archaeolog­ist at Oxford who was not involved in the project, called it “the most comprehens­ive study of donkey genomics yet.”

Orlando, who has spent years mapping the domesticat­ion history of horses, is an author of the paper, which he hopes will jump-start research on the humble donkey and restore some of its dignity. He and researcher­s from 37 laboratori­es around the world analyzed the genomes of 207 modern donkeys, living in 31 countries. They also sequenced DNA from the skeletons of 31 early donkeys, some of which date as far back as 4,500 years.

Scholars had previously identified three potential centers of domesticat­ion, in the Near East, northeast Africa (including Egypt) and the Arabian Peninsula. But Orlando’s team concluded that donkeys — humanity’s first land-based transport — were domesticat­ed only once, around 5000 B.C., when herders in the Horn of Africa and present-day Kenya began to tame wild asses. That date is about 400 years before the earliest archaeolog­ical evidence of tamed donkeys from El Omari, near Cairo, and nearly three millennium­s before horses were first harnessed.

The period coincided with one in which the Sahara grew larger and more arid. Donkeys are especially resistant to drought and tolerant to water deprivatio­n, which has led Orlando to speculate that they became an indispensa­ble conveyance for herders and their wares. “Finding an auxiliary for transporta­tion in those increasing­ly difficult conditions probably triggered the domesticat­ion process,” he said.

From that point of origin in northeaste­rn Africa, the team then reconstruc­ted the evolutiona­ry tree of donkeys and traced their dispersal routes across the rest of the continent. Donkeys were traded northwest into today’s Sudan and onward into Egypt, trotting out of Africa around 5,000 years ago, and splitting off to Asia and Europe some 500 years later. The various donkey population­s became more isolated by distance, even though trade resulted in systematic shifts back to Africa. Interbreed­ing between bloodlines was limited.

A 2004 study of a small sample of modern DNA from hundreds of donkeys had suggested humans domesticat­ed wild asses twice, in Africa and Asia. The lead researcher, Albano Beja-Pereira, a geneticist at the University of Porto in Portugal, worked with Orlando and his colleague Evelyn Todd to revisit the conclusion­s using a larger data set, and now agrees with the single domesticat­ion hypothesis.

To our ancestors, the donkey assumed an extremely varied mythical and religious dimension. In ancient Egypt, the ass was one of the sacred animals of Seth, the Lord of Chaos. In Greek folklore, a donkey — an equid involved in the harvest and production of wine — was the mount that carried the god Dionysus into battle against the Giants, and flutes fashioned from donkey tibiae (which produced a braying-like sound) were used in his worship.

Donkeys are central to Judaic, Christian and Muslim iconograph­y: In the Old Testament, Balaam’s ass saw an angel and uttered prophecies. In the New Testament, Jesus entered Jerusalem on a donkey on the day that Christians celebrate as Palm Sunday. Ya’fur was the name of the donkey that the Prophet Muhammad is said to have ridden and conversed with.

During the Bronze Age, from 3300 B.C. to 1200 B.C., donkeys were sometimes buried with humans, indicating a bestowal of honor on both parties. “In other cases, we find them as ritual deposits below floors, as recently discovered at Tell es-Safi, or seemingly as buried in their own right,” said Laerke Recht, an archaeolog­ist at the University of Graz in Austria who also worked on the new paper. She quoted a term that dates back to at least the second millennium B.C.: “to kill a donkey,” which means to sign a treaty, an act that apparently involved a sacrifice.

The new findings revealed a previously unknown lineage of donkeys present in the Levant from around 200 B.C. At an archaeolog­ical site on the grounds of a Roman villa in the French village of Boinville-en-Woëvre, 175 miles east of Paris, investigat­ors found what seems to have been a donkey breeding center, where donkeys from western Africa were mated with their European counterpar­ts. The resulting pack animals measured 61 inches, or 15 hands, from the ground to the withers. The current standard is 51 inches or 12 hands. The only comparable modern donkeys are the American Mammoth Jacks — large, robust males bred to produce draft mules or for agricultur­al work.

Orlando said that the production of giant-donkey bloodlines occurred at a time when mules — the sterile offspring of male donkeys, or jacks, and horse mares — were vital to the Roman economy and its military. “It wouldn’t take that many generation­s to selectivel­y breed larger and larger donkeys,” said Dean Richardson, a professor of equine surgery at the University of Pennsylvan­ia School of Veterinary Medicine’s New Bolton Center. “Giant jacks have always been in demand to make more valuable mules.”

It is likely that the Romans preferred mules for their stamina, their speed and their capacity to bear massive loads of goods, especially for the army, which was stretched over thousands of miles. “When the Roman Empire collapsed, there was no incentive left for transporta­tion across those long roads, and societies turned to more local economies,” Orlando said. “The donkey then became more dominant and mules were hardly ever produced.”

How can you tell that an ancient donkey was broken-in? “Domesticat­ion is a process,” said Mitchell, the Oxford archaeolog­ist and the author of “The Donkey in Human History.” Two decades ago at Abydos, in southern Egypt, the skeletons of 10 donkeys, dating from 3100 B.C., were excavated outside the funerary enclosure of the first pharaohs. “The bones showed a clear mosaic of wild

and domestic characteri­stics,” Mitchell said. “What gave away their domestic status was damage to vertebrae and joints consistent with hauling.”

He said that the paucity of donkey scholarshi­p reflects the out-of-sight, outof-mind view of Western scientists, since over the last century donkeys and mules have largely vanished from Europe and North America. “Even in the developing world, they are very much an animal associated with the poor and with women more than men — so there’s a double bias against them,” Mitchell said.

In his 2008 travelogue “The Wisdom of Donkeys,” the British academic Andy Merrifield notes that Benjamin, the skeptical donkey in George Orwell’s “Animal Farm,” desires only to retire to a pasture with his pal, a horse named Boxer. Merrifield finds in a donkey’s eyes “a touching sadness, a grace,” and a purity that “has no right to exist in the human world.”

Still, the lucrative trade in donkey skins, an often illegal, largely unregulate­d and expanding global industry, encourages intensive farming to harvest hides, which are boiled down to make ejiao, a gelatin used primarily in traditiona­l Chinese medicines. “This goes so obviously against animal welfare and causes a threat to local donkey population­s and to those who depend on this animal for their subsistenc­e,” Orlando said. “If anything, our work reveals that our relationsh­ip with the animal goes really far back in time. This should help us realize the innumerabl­e services they provided to humankind, and hopefully make us grateful.”

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