The Canarian camel: A traditional dromedary population

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Abstract

The domestic camel (dromedary) is the most important livestock species in the Canary Islands and the most important autochthonous European camel population. After six centuries of a successful adaptation process to the particular environment of the Canary Islands, the abandonment of traditional agriculture has led this population to a major bottleneck. Along with a lack of foreign genetic interchanges, this could lead the population to the brink of extinction. Genetic analysis using 13 microsatellites showed the closest genetic proximity to the North African (Tindouf, Algeria) camel population and a certain degree of sub-division, with significant genetic differences among breeders. An important level of genetic differentiation among the different populations analyzed was found with a global FST value of 0.116. © 2010 by the authors; licensee Molecular Diversity Preservation International, Basel, Switzerland.

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Schulz, U., Tupac-Yupanqui, I., Martínez, A., Méndez, S., Delgado, J. V., Gómez, M., … Cañón, J. (2010). The Canarian camel: A traditional dromedary population. Diversity, 2(4), 561–571. https://doi.org/10.3390/d2040561

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