Ancient DNA suggests modern wolves trace their origin to a Late Pleistocene expansion from Beringia

Liisa Loog(University of Cambridge), Andrea Manica(University of Cambridge), Elena Y. Pavlova(Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute), Verena J. Schuenemann(University of Zurich), Kelsey E. Witt(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Gontran Sonet(Institute of Natural Sciences), Greger Larson(University of Oxford), Nathan Wales(University of Connecticut), Martina Lázničková‐Galetová(Charles University), Boris Gasparyan(Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography), Eske Willerslev(Natural History Museum Aarhus), Karl‐Heinz Herzig(Kuopio University Hospital), Laurent Frantz(Wageningen University & Research), Hannes Napierala(Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Ripan S. Malhi(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Olaf Thalmann(Poznan University of Medical Sciences), Anders J. Hansen(University of Copenhagen), Inge Lundstrøm(University of Copenhagen), M. Thomas P. Gilbert(Natural History Museum of Denmark), Angela Perri(Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology), Anders Eriksson(University of Cambridge), Hans-Peter Uerpmann(University of Tübingen), Vladimir V. Pitulko(Institute of History of Material Culture), Hervé Bocherens(Senckenberg Centre for Human Evolution and Palaeoenvironment), Hannes Schroeder(University of Copenhagen), Marcela Sandoval‐Velasco(University of Copenhagen), Jane Budd(Endangered Wildlife Trust), Mietje Germonpré(Institute of Natural Sciences), Elodie‐Laure Jimenez(Institute of Natural Sciences), Sergey Fedorov(North-Eastern Federal University), Pavel A. Nikolskiy(Geological Institute), Keith Dobney(University of Aberdeen), Johannes Krause(Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History), Andrew W. Kandel(Loyola University Chicago), Jose A. Samaniego Castruita(University of Copenhagen), Mikkel‐Holger S. Sinding(University of Copenhagen)
Molecular Ecology
December 16, 2019
Cited by 115


Related Papers