Karitiana Explained

Group:Karitiana
Population:320 (2005)[1]
Popplace: (Rondônia)
Languages:Karitiana

The Karitiana or Caritiana are an indigenous people of Brazil, whose reservation is located in the western Amazon. They count 320 members, and the leader of their tribal association is Renato Caritiana. They subsist by farming, fishing and hunting, and have almost no contact with the outside world. Their tongue, the Karitiâna language, is an Arikém language of Brazil.

Studies of population genetics often use the Karitiana as a reference population for Native Americans, using DNA samples made available through the Human Genome Diversity Project and other sources.[2] [3] DNA from Karitiana individuals was collected in 1987 by Francis Black and in 2007 it was reported that this sampling was undertaken unbeknownst to FUNAI, the Brazilian agency that regulates contact between the indigenous tribes and the outside world, and that the samples were being distributed for a fee with no benefit to the Karitiana, giving rise to claims of biopiracy.[4] The same newspaper report claimed that further samples were taken in 1996 by Dr. Hilton Pereira da Silva, a doctor on a documentary film crew, on the promise of medicinal supplies that were never fulfilled.[5] A response from Dr. Silva suggests that the news story was faulty and the medicinal samples he took were never used for any commercial purpose.[6]

Origins

A 2015 genetic study reached a surprising conclusion about the origins of the Karitiana people. While the Karitiana people are closely related to other Native Americans, they share closer relations to Southeast Asians & Polynesians compared with other Native Americans which are closest to Siberians and Northeast Asians.[7] [8]

A study by Iosif Lazaridis (2014) found Karitiana to carry Mal'ta MA1 (41%) admixture while the other geneflow in Karitiana appears to have an Eastern Eurasian origin.[9] A study by Kanazawa-Kiriyama et al. (2017) detected gene flow from Karitiana to Mal'ta MA1 (21%) which is in the reverse direction of what was reported in previous studies such as Raghavan et al. 2014 who used a much larger sequence data. The authors speculate that the inverse flow could be due to Ancient Beringian migration in a westward migration into Eurasia.[10]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://pib.socioambiental.org/en/povo/karitiana "Karitiana: Introduction."
  2. Nuclear DNA diversity in worldwide distributed human populations. 1997. Zietkiewicz. Gene. Elsevier. 28 January 2014. 205. 1–2. 161–171. 10.1016/s0378-1119(97)00408-3 . 9461390. etal.
  3. Web site: ALFRED Population Information. Yale University.
  4. Web site: Karitiana: Biopiracy and the unauthorized collection of biomedical samples. May 2005. 28 January 2014. Povos Indigena no Brasil. Instituto Socioambiental.
  5. Web site: In the Amazon, giving blood but getting nothing . Larry Rohter . International Herald Tribune.
  6. Web site: Ethical Humanitarian Medical Work, Not Bio-piracy . Hilton Pereira da Silva . Center for Genetics and Society. update to "In the Amazon, Giving Blood but Getting Nothing".
  7. Skoglund . P. . Mallick . S. . Bortolini . M.C. . Chennagiri . N. . Hünemeier . T. . Petzl-Erler . M.L. . Maria Luiza Petzl-Erler . Salzano . F.M. . Patterson . N. . Reich . D. . David Reich (geneticist) . 21 July 2015 . Genetic evidence for two founding populations of the Americas . Nature . 525 . 7567 . 104–8 . 2015Natur.525..104S . 10.1038/nature14895 . 4982469 . 26196601.
  8. Skoglund. P.. Reich. D.. A genomic view of the peopling of the Americas. Current Opinion in Genetics & Development. 41. 2016. 27–35. 10.1016/j.gde.2016.06.016. 5161672. 27507099.
  9. Ancient human genomes suggest three ancestral populations for present-day Europeans Iosif Lazaridis et al. (2014)
  10. Kanzawa-Kiriyama. Hideaki. Kryukov. Kirill. Jinam. Timothy A.. Hosomichi. Kazuyoshi. Saso. Aiko. Suwa. Gen. Ueda. Shintaroh. Yoneda. Minoru. Tajima. Atsushi. Shinoda. Ken-ichi. Inoue. Ituro. February 2017. A partial nuclear genome of the Jomons who lived 3000 years ago in Fukushima, Japan. Journal of Human Genetics. en. 62. 2. 213–221. 10.1038/jhg.2016.110. 27581845. 5285490. 1435-232X. free.