The Japan Times - The sex lives of Neanderthal males - and human females

EUR -
AED 4.334552
AFN 73.755948
ALL 96.475038
AMD 444.952931
ANG 2.112102
AOA 1082.17184
ARS 1662.208702
AUD 1.659106
AWG 2.119795
AZN 1.993699
BAM 1.954959
BBD 2.376677
BDT 144.177964
BGN 1.944424
BHD 0.444974
BIF 3500.24252
BMD 1.180122
BND 1.490659
BOB 8.154691
BRL 6.062877
BSD 1.179892
BTN 107.224864
BWP 15.504997
BYN 3.405535
BYR 23130.395617
BZD 2.373179
CAD 1.61482
CDF 2543.163186
CHF 0.913529
CLF 0.025873
CLP 1021.596161
CNY 8.073687
CNH 8.075919
COP 4447.479426
CRC 558.479701
CUC 1.180122
CUP 31.273239
CVE 110.783989
CZK 24.24685
DJF 209.731449
DKK 7.471508
DOP 71.10207
DZD 153.375192
EGP 56.588034
ERN 17.701833
ETB 184.305557
FJD 2.589152
FKP 0.870934
GBP 0.874648
GEL 3.150483
GGP 0.870934
GHS 12.574198
GIP 0.870934
GMD 86.148712
GNF 10355.572849
GTQ 9.053804
GYD 246.77173
HKD 9.232627
HNL 31.308653
HRK 7.534019
HTG 154.743418
HUF 375.833964
IDR 19777.668375
ILS 3.694107
IMP 0.870934
INR 107.389176
IQD 1546.550176
IRR 1550734.890223
ISK 143.289729
JEP 0.870934
JMD 183.828903
JOD 0.836674
JPY 184.272577
KES 152.235923
KGS 103.201877
KHR 4733.470481
KMF 493.291198
KPW 1062.105961
KRW 1690.430844
KWD 0.361897
KYD 0.983369
KZT 588.756674
LAK 25278.217869
LBP 105601.380017
LKR 364.673091
LRD 216.699935
LSL 18.869792
LTL 3.484594
LVL 0.713844
LYD 7.464253
MAD 10.827035
MDL 20.201137
MGA 5016.698967
MKD 61.64146
MMK 2478.330406
MNT 4211.76643
MOP 9.50521
MRU 47.157845
MUR 54.652104
MVR 18.244915
MWK 2049.871938
MXN 20.28536
MYR 4.58593
MZN 75.415687
NAD 18.870386
NGN 1601.390584
NIO 43.334338
NOK 11.272406
NPR 171.560182
NZD 1.971943
OMR 0.453774
PAB 1.179892
PEN 3.959315
PGK 5.071108
PHP 68.008079
PKR 329.847995
PLN 4.222224
PYG 7599.330214
QAR 4.296869
RON 5.094707
RSD 117.41152
RUB 90.723458
RWF 1719.438082
SAR 4.425921
SBD 9.498226
SCR 15.958624
SDG 709.846218
SEK 10.676872
SGD 1.491745
SHP 0.885397
SLE 28.910982
SLL 24746.572238
SOS 674.436597
SRD 44.605067
STD 24426.147407
STN 24.782567
SVC 10.326557
SYP 130.699618
SZL 18.846306
THB 36.655827
TJS 11.209582
TMT 4.142229
TND 3.378096
TOP 2.841451
TRY 51.788696
TTD 8.006555
TWD 36.892393
TZS 3016.583553
UAH 50.976566
UGX 4247.372471
USD 1.180122
UYU 45.170564
UZS 14338.485357
VES 484.524983
VND 30771.687026
VUV 140.392829
WST 3.203527
XAF 655.674881
XAG 0.013272
XAU 0.000227
XCD 3.189339
XCG 2.126485
XDR 0.813998
XOF 653.193606
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.457421
ZAR 18.7866
ZMK 10622.519369
ZMW 22.090495
ZWL 379.998875
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0157

    23.8799

    -0.07%

  • RYCEF

    0.7300

    18.44

    +3.96%

  • VOD

    -0.4600

    15.4

    -2.99%

  • RIO

    -1.6900

    99.09

    -1.71%

  • BCC

    0.0200

    83.64

    +0.02%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.17

    +0.23%

  • CMSD

    -0.1000

    23.59

    -0.42%

  • RELX

    1.3700

    34.06

    +4.02%

  • NGG

    -0.2100

    93.72

    -0.22%

  • BCE

    0.0400

    25.67

    +0.16%

  • AZN

    -1.8100

    203.98

    -0.89%

  • GSK

    -1.4700

    58.07

    -2.53%

  • BTI

    -0.3600

    62.67

    -0.57%

  • BP

    -0.1000

    37.99

    -0.26%

The sex lives of Neanderthal males - and human females
The sex lives of Neanderthal males - and human females / Photo: STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN - AFP

The sex lives of Neanderthal males - and human females

Dating out of your league? New research says it's a tale as old as time.

Text size:

A study out Thursday in Science argues that Neanderthal men and human women were particularly inclined to mate, a sexual habit that offers insight into the evolution of the modern human genome.

In 2010 scientists reconstructed the Neanderthal genome -- blockbuster research that allowed for analysis making clear that the species interbred.

Most people living today have some residual fragments of DNA from our ancient evolutionary cousins.

Research indicates both groups descended from a population living in Africa some million years ago.

They eventually diverged, with anatomically modern humans evolving in Africa, and Neanderthals migrating across Eurasia.

But over hundreds of millenia, human migrations resulted in interbreeding, researchers say.

Yet humans have little to no Neanderthal DNA on our X chromosomes -- one of two human chromosomes that determines an embryo's sex.

That was assumed to be the result of a natural selection.

The genes were biologically "toxic" to humans, researchers hypothesized, and eventually purged out -- in essence, the children who inherited those traits might not have lived to pass them on.

But the new study from geneticists at the University of Pennsylvania suggests the phenomenon has more social origins, and were actually the result of "long-standing mating preferences."

The team analyzed modern human DNA preserved in Neanderthals, and found an abundance on the X chromosome -- the mirror opposite of humans.

That result allowed them to rule out that reproduction between the species was incompatible.

Instead the gene flow "occurred predominantly between Neanderthal males and anatomically modern human females," said Alexander Platt, a senior research scientist on the study.

Since females have two X chromosomes and males just one, the math adds up: If Neanderthal males and modern human females were mating, more Neanderthal X chromosomes would enter the human gene pool, and vice versa.

Researchers said that sex-biased migration could also offer clues. But ancient mating habits "provided the simplest explanation," Platt said.

The larger "why" is unknown: Neanderthal men and modern human women might have been mating by choice, or violence and coercion could have been involved.

Researchers say they now hope to analyze the development of this mating pattern.

Possibilities include probing gender dynamics within Neanderthal society, or migration habits -- perhaps males were likely to leave their societies while females stayed with their families, for example.

Y.Ishikawa--JT