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Humans begin domesticating the pig in Anatolia and China

Around 9,000 years ago, in what is now Turkey, people began doing something that would reshape agriculture across the ancient world: they started breeding wild boar for desirable traits, gradually transforming one of nature’s most stubborn and independent animals into a reliable food source. It was one of the most consequential decisions early farming communities ever made — and it turns out to have been far messier, more widespread, and more biologically complicated than anyone imagined.

What the evidence shows

  • Pig domestication: Genetic and archaeological evidence confirms that pigs were domesticated independently in at least two locations — Anatolia (modern-day Turkey) and China’s Mekong valley — around 9,000 years ago, or roughly 7000 B.C.E.
  • Wild boar interbreeding: Whole-genome analyses of over 700 wild and domesticated pigs reveal that early domesticated pigs regularly mated with wild boar populations, meaning the founding genetic stock has largely been replaced over millennia.
  • Domestication islands: Despite widespread interbreeding, farmers consistently selected for key traits like tameness and size, creating “islands of domestication” — clusters of genes that persisted across generations even as the broader genome mixed freely with wild populations.

The long road from boar to barnyard

For more than a century, researchers assumed pig domestication followed a tidy script: a small group of wild boar were corralled, separated from the wild, and selectively bred until they became the docile, heavy-bodied animals we recognize today. Charles Darwin himself used the dramatic differences between wild and domestic animals as evidence for his theory of evolution by selection.

The genomic era has overturned that story almost completely.

A landmark 2015 C.E. study published in Nature Genetics, led by bioinformaticist Laurent Frantz at the University of Oxford, analyzed 103 complete pig genomes alongside partial genetic data from 600 additional wild and domesticated animals across Europe and Asia. What emerged was not a clean family tree but a sprawling, tangled web of ancestry. Early domesticated pigs, brought from the Near East into Europe, mated extensively with local wild boar populations. Over time, those original Near Eastern lineages were almost entirely absorbed into European wild boar genetics — while the domesticated traits somehow survived.

The key to that apparent paradox is the concept of domestication islands: specific regions of the genome, particularly genes linked to behavior and body size, that were consistently favored by farmers selecting for pig-like characteristics. These islands appear in both European and Asian pig genomes, suggesting that independent domestication events in different parts of the world converged on similar genetic solutions to the same practical problem — how to make a wild animal manageable and productive.

Two origins, one story

The dual origins of pig domestication matter more than they might seem. They tell us that early agricultural communities in Anatolia and in China’s river valleys arrived at the same insight independently: wild boar could be brought into the human world and made useful. This wasn’t knowledge that traveled along trade routes from a single source. It was something people in separate places figured out on their own, facing similar pressures and opportunities.

Researchers also found evidence of a mysterious “ghost” population — a group of wild pigs whose descendants appear in European domestic breeds but whose remains haven’t been identified anywhere in the archaeological record. This suggests pigs were herded across long distances in the ancient world, mating with populations whose identity has since been lost to time. Much later, in the 1800s C.E., European farmers imported Chinese pig breeds to improve their commercial stock, adding another layer of Asian ancestry to European pigs that persists to this day.

What this means for understanding domestication

The pig story is now recognized as part of a broader pattern. Similar evidence of interbreeding between domesticated and wild populations has been found in dogs, horses, and even barley. The boundary between wild and domestic was, for most of human history, far more porous than scientists assumed.

That realization has practical implications. If domestication works through the reinforcement of specific genetic islands while the rest of the genome stays relatively open, then the process is more resilient — and more dynamic — than a simple bottleneck model would predict. It also suggests that domestication was not a single event but an ongoing negotiation between human selection pressures and the wild genetic diversity that surrounded early farming communities.

Fiona Marshall, an anthropologist at Washington University in St. Louis, described the findings as challenging “the assumptions of 100 years of research.” Evolutionary biologist Greger Larson of Oxford called the result “a massive mosaic, with gene flow between east and west and between wild and domesticated.” The work has pushed researchers to ask not just where domestication happened, but how the process actually functioned at the genetic level — and what kept it stable across thousands of years of messy biological reality.

Lasting impact

Pigs became one of the most economically important animals in human history. Across Eurasia, pig farming provided dense, reliable calories that helped support growing sedentary populations. Pork and pork products became central to cuisines, economies, and agricultural systems on multiple continents. In many cultures, pigs were also deeply embedded in ritual, trade, and social life — from feasting traditions in Neolithic Europe to ceremonial exchange in parts of Melanesia and Southeast Asia.

The genetic insights from this research have reshaped how scientists study all domesticated species. The concept of domestication islands is now a working model being tested in cattle, sheep, chickens, and crops — a direct downstream consequence of asking hard questions about where the modern pig came from. And ancient DNA sequencing, which is helping researchers identify when and where those islands first formed, has become one of the most powerful tools in the archaeology of human-animal relationships.

Blindspots and limits

The 7000 B.C.E. date represents current best estimates, but the archaeological and genomic record for early pig domestication remains incomplete, particularly in central Eurasia where the hypothesized “ghost” population likely lived. The communities who first bred pigs in Anatolia and the Mekong valley left no written accounts, and the motivations, methods, and social structures that made domestication possible are inferred rather than observed. Genomics can tell us what happened in the genome; it cannot fully recover the human experience of that slow, generational process.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Science — Taming the pig took some wild turns

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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