rhamphotheca:

High Performance Pigeons Have a Dirty Little Secret?
by Jane J. Lee
The high-stakes world of domestic pigeon breeding is reflected in its  finely tuned racers and the outrageous plumage of its show birds. Now,  new         research shows surprising connections between very  different-looking breeds, as well as evidence of liaisons between racing  pigeons and feral populations of the motley city pigeon. In a study published today in Current Biology, researchers propose a        family tree for domestic pigeon breeds.
Analyzing repeating         sequences of DNA called microsatellites, the scientists were  able to figure out that the 70 pigeon breeds they studied fell into two  groups. Pigeons         with fantails, manes, and exaggerated crops (outgrowths of the  esophagus) were closely related, while the acrobatic breeds, homing  pigeons, and breeds         with the smallest and largest beaks filled out the second group.
The scientists also found that wayward racing pigeons were breeding  with feral         populations. The researchers will use this web of relatedness to  help them answer broader questions on how changes in an organism’s  genetic blueprint         give rise to physical traits like color or the size of limbs.  Domestic pigeons are ideally suited for this kind of study, the  scientists write, because         they are incredibly diverse and are still able to interbreed.
(via: Science NOW)     (image: Michael Shapiro, Univ. of Utah)

rhamphotheca:

High Performance Pigeons Have a Dirty Little Secret?

by Jane J. Lee

The high-stakes world of domestic pigeon breeding is reflected in its finely tuned racers and the outrageous plumage of its show birds. Now, new research shows surprising connections between very different-looking breeds, as well as evidence of liaisons between racing pigeons and feral populations of the motley city pigeon. In a study published today in Current Biology, researchers propose a family tree for domestic pigeon breeds.

Analyzing repeating sequences of DNA called microsatellites, the scientists were able to figure out that the 70 pigeon breeds they studied fell into two groups. Pigeons with fantails, manes, and exaggerated crops (outgrowths of the esophagus) were closely related, while the acrobatic breeds, homing pigeons, and breeds with the smallest and largest beaks filled out the second group.

The scientists also found that wayward racing pigeons were breeding with feral populations. The researchers will use this web of relatedness to help them answer broader questions on how changes in an organism’s genetic blueprint give rise to physical traits like color or the size of limbs. Domestic pigeons are ideally suited for this kind of study, the scientists write, because they are incredibly diverse and are still able to interbreed.

(via: Science NOW)     (image: Michael Shapiro, Univ. of Utah)