Science has a very interesting item but, sadly, in the
You can check the summary out here:https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adt2642?fbclid=IwY2xjawOX1TVleHRuA2FlbQIxMQBzcnRjBmFwcF9pZBAyMjIwMzkxNzg4MjAwODkyAAEe7fIQ2KaTst1mbR52NHR1jcQsURa9GykgMoRxVwqmiDhmQmOdNfKdnJvxFfo_aem_2lYuqmXFreAdp8o6CkmxiQ
The dispersal of domestic cats from North Africa to
Editor’s summary
Tracing the origins of domestic cats (Felis catus) has been limited by a lack of ancient DNA for these animals, as well by their morphological similarity to the African wildcat (F. lybica lybica) and European wildcat (F. sylvestris). De Martino et al. generated low- to medium-coverage genomes for 87 ancient, museum, and modern cats (see the Perspective by Losos). They found that domestic cats are most genetically similar to African wildcats, although there has been widespread gene flow between wild and domestic populations. European samples that cluster with domestic cats only appear in the 1st century CE, suggesting a later dispersal of domestic cats than previously thought. Although broader sampling is needed, this study shows the complexity of population dynamics that is often revealed when looking beyond mitochondrial DNA. —Corinne Simonti
Structured Abstract
INTRODUCTION
The domestic cat (Felis catus) originated from the African wildcat (Felis lybica lybica), which is presently distributed across North Africa and the
RATIONALE
The timing and circumstances of cat domestication and dispersal remain uncertain owing to the limited number of ancient and modern genomes analyzed thus far. Questions remain about the natural distribution ranges of African and European (Felis silvestris) wildcats in the past and their potential admixture. A recent study showed that ancient gene flow might confound the reconstruction of cat dispersal, particularly when based on mtDNA. The origin of African wildcat populations in the Mediterranean islands of Sardinia and
RESULTS
We generated a genomic time transect spanning the past 11,000 years and found that cats previously identified as carrying a F. l. lybica mtDNA clade from Neolithic and Chalcolithic southeast Europe and Anatolia, dated between 9500 and 6300 years ago, were F. silvestris wildcats whose ancestors hybridized with F. l. lybica. Ancient genomes revealed an increasing trend of African wildcat ancestry ranging from 9 to 34% eastward, from
The earliest cat belonging to the genetic cluster of as F. l. lybica and F. catus in Europe originates from the site of Genoni, in Sardinia (
CONCLUSION
Our findings challenge the commonly held view of a Neolithic introduction of domestic cats to

The introduction of domestic cats to
The genomes of ancient cats from archaeological sites across Europe and Anatolia (dark circles in the map) revealed that domestic cats were introduced to Europe from North Africa starting at ~2 thousand years ago (kya), several millennia after the onset of the Neolithic in
Abstract
The domestic cat (Felis catus) descends from the African wildcat Felis lybica lybica. Its global distribution alongside humans testifies to its successful adaptation to anthropogenic environments. Uncertainty remains regarding whether domestic cats originated in the Levant,
fin summary
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There was established trading through sea merchants and it is how a barbary macaque (baboon) got to Iron Age Ireland as a "gift" or some such -dug up on the Time Team TV series. There are (if you do not read or study or follow evidence) supposedly no wild cats in Ireland -in more modern times European wild cat types have been out in the wild and if not escapes from private collections likely released for shooting 'sport' as in England. However, the historically reported (but not believed by the established zoological hierarchy who discredited their own colleagues) was North African wild cat and there is at least one pelt of a descendent to prove it.
Romans are always given the credit!
Wild cats in the UK were shot, poisoned, clubbed and torn to bits by hounds for fun and succumbed to extinction by the 1860s -for over 100 years before that naturalists wrote that if it were not for feral domestic cats interbreeding with wild cats then the wild cats would have become extinct "hundreds of years ago". Gamekeepers, "country squires" and 'sportsmen' still kill the current generation of New wild cats (themselves hybridised) along with any other cat they see to "prevent inter-breeding with wild cats" -that inter-breeding is what has kept the New wild cats in existence.
(c)2025 respective copyright holder
Humans kill for fun and then pretend it was conservation and as a reminder of that 'fun': in the 1960s in
Protected species status means nothing in the
And squirrels?
1981: The original protection was granted under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, making intentional acts against red squirrels and their shelters illegal.
2004: Protection was extended in
2006: Red squirrels became a Section 41 species of Principal Importance for Conservation under the Natural Environment & Rural Communities (NERC) Act.
So why are forestry companies still killing them with impunity -money? Why are private estate gamekeepers still killing them as "vermin"? Where are all of the prosecutions because it seems that everyone involved in wildlife knows this is going on but...oh. "Private property" (and money) and Royal Estates.
If you want to learn the truth about British wild cats then read the results of 40 plus years research: The Red Paper 2022 -Felidae.




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