Genome Study Reveals Milestone in History of Cat Domestication

FILE PHOTO: Cats crowd the harbour on Aoshima Island in the Ehime prefecture in southern Japan February 25, 2015. Picture taken February 25, 2015. REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Cats crowd the harbour on Aoshima Island in the Ehime prefecture in southern Japan February 25, 2015. Picture taken February 25, 2015. REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo
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Genome Study Reveals Milestone in History of Cat Domestication

FILE PHOTO: Cats crowd the harbour on Aoshima Island in the Ehime prefecture in southern Japan February 25, 2015. Picture taken February 25, 2015. REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Cats crowd the harbour on Aoshima Island in the Ehime prefecture in southern Japan February 25, 2015. Picture taken February 25, 2015. REUTERS/Thomas Peter/File Photo

Whether they are a Siamese, Persian, Maine Coon, or Domestic Shorthair, there are hundreds of millions of cats living with people around the world. But despite their popularity as pets, the history of cat domestication has remained difficult for scientists to decipher.

A new genome study is providing some insight into the matter by determining the timing of a key milestone in feline domestication - the introduction of domestic cats into Europe from North Africa.

Domestic cats pounced into Europe roughly 2,000 years ago in early imperial Roman times, the researchers found, probably thanks to maritime trade. Some of these furry trailblazers may have been brought by sailors to hunt mice on ships that plied the Mediterranean carrying grain from the fertile fields of Egypt to ports serving Rome and other cities in the sprawling Roman Empire.

The findings contradict a long-held idea that domestication occurred in prehistoric times, perhaps 6,000 to 7,000 years ago, as farmers from the ancient Near East and Middle East first moved into Europe, bringing cats with them.

"We show that the earliest domestic cat genomes in Europe are found from the Roman imperial period onwards," starting in the first century AD, said paleogeneticist Claudio Ottoni of the University of Rome Tor Vergata, lead author of the study published on Thursday in the journal Science.

The study used genetic data from feline remains from 97 archaeological sites across Europe and the Near East as well as from present-day cats. The researchers analyzed 225 bones of cats - domestic and wild - ranging from about 10,000 years ago to the 19th century AD, and generated 70 ancient feline genomes.

The researchers found that cat remains from prehistoric sites in Europe belonged to wildcats, not early domestic cats.

Dogs were the first animal domesticated by people, descended from an ancient wolf population separate from modern wolves. The domestic cat came later, descended from the African wildcat.

"The introduction of the domestic cat to Europe is important because it marks a significant moment in their long-term relationship with humans. Cats aren't just another species arriving on a new continent. They're an animal that became deeply integrated into human societies, economies and even belief systems," University of Rome Tor Vergata paleogeneticist and study co-author Marco De Martino said, according to Reuters.

The genome data identified two introductions of cats to Europe from North Africa.

Roughly 2,200 years ago, people brought wildcats from northwestern Africa to the island of Sardinia, whose present-day wildcat population descended from these migrants.

But those were not domestic cats. It was a separate dispersal from North Africa about two centuries later that formed the genetic basis of the modern domestic cat in Europe.

The study's findings suggest that there was not a single core region of cat domestication, but that several regions and cultures in North Africa played a role, according to zooarchaeologist and study co-author Bea De Cupere of the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences.

"The timing of the genetic waves of introduction from North Africa coincides with periods when trade around the Mediterranean intensified strongly. Cats likely traveled as efficient mouse hunters on grain ships but possibly also as valued animals with religious and symbolic significance," De Cupere said.

Cats, for example, were important in ancient Egypt, whose pantheon included feline deities and whose royalty kept pet cats, sometimes mummifying them for burial in elaborate coffins.

The ancient Roman army, with outposts arrayed across Europe, and its entourage played an instrumental role in the dispersal of domestic cats throughout the continent, as attested to by feline remains discovered at the sites of Roman military camps.

The earliest domestic cat in Europe identified in the study - one genetically similar to present-day domestic cats - dated to between 50 BC and 80 AD from the Austrian town of Mautern, site of a Roman fort along the Danube River.

The study, however, does not unravel the timing and location of the initial feline domestication.

"Cat domestication is complex," Ottoni said, "and what we can tell now is the timing of the introduction of domestic cats to Europe from North Africa. We can't really say much what happened before and where."



UK Police Arrest Man after Toddler Ends Up in Crocodile Enclosure in Zoo

A crocodile swims in Bandia Conservation Park, in Mbour, Senegal June 14, 2026. REUTERS/Raghed Waked
A crocodile swims in Bandia Conservation Park, in Mbour, Senegal June 14, 2026. REUTERS/Raghed Waked
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UK Police Arrest Man after Toddler Ends Up in Crocodile Enclosure in Zoo

A crocodile swims in Bandia Conservation Park, in Mbour, Senegal June 14, 2026. REUTERS/Raghed Waked
A crocodile swims in Bandia Conservation Park, in Mbour, Senegal June 14, 2026. REUTERS/Raghed Waked

Police in eastern England on Thursday arrested a 30-year-old man on suspicion of attempted murder after a 3-year-old boy ended up in a crocodile enclosure at a zoo near the English university city of Cambridge.

Cambridgeshire Police said officers were called early afternoon to Johnsons Zoo in Old Hurst following “reports of an incident involving a 3-year-old boy, during which he ended up in the crocodile enclosure."

The boy was taken to Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge about 25 miles (40 kilometers) away. According to The Associated Press, police said he was in critical but stable condition, and that a man from the nearby county of Norfolk was arrested on suspicion of murder.

“We do not believe the man arrested and the child are known to each other," said Detective Inspector Verity McCann.

According to its website, the zoo is home to more than 100 animals, including lions, tigers, sloth bears, capybaras, meerkats and crocodiles.


King Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Records 34 New Bird Species for First Time

Among the notable species recorded for the first time were the Rüppell's Vulture - SPA
Among the notable species recorded for the first time were the Rüppell's Vulture - SPA
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King Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Records 34 New Bird Species for First Time

Among the notable species recorded for the first time were the Rüppell's Vulture - SPA
Among the notable species recorded for the first time were the Rüppell's Vulture - SPA

The King Abdulaziz Royal Reserve Development Authority announced a significant environmental achievement during the first half of 2026, recording 34 new bird species added for the first time to the reserve's biodiversity list, raising the total number of recorded bird species to 225—a 15% increase in the reserve's documented avian diversity.

The authority explained that this achievement stems from continuous improvement in field monitoring efficiency and comprehensive geographic coverage within the reserve's boundaries, enhancing the accuracy of biodiversity documentation, SPA reported.

Spokesperson of the authority Abdulaziz Al-Furaih stated that the new findings reflect the accelerating development of the reserve's environmental monitoring programs, noting that documenting this number of new species is an important scientific indicator of ecosystem health and habitat integrity within the reserve, reinforcing its standing as one of the region's leading environments supporting biodiversity and migratory bird routes, in line with Saudi Vision 2030 and the Saudi Green Initiative.

Among the notable species recorded for the first time were the Rüppell's Vulture, the rare Red Phalarope, and the Pectoral Sandpiper, alongside migratory and rare birds including the Rose-colored Starling, Yellow Wagtail, Eurasian Skylark, and Song Thrush, reinforcing the reserve's scientific value as an international biodiversity observatory.

The monitoring results also confirmed the documentation of species of high conservation value listed on the IUCN Red List, most notably the African Vulture, classified as critically endangered, alongside near-threatened species such as the Western Orphean Warbler and the White-winged Lark.


Satellite Observations Detect 'Urban Pulse' of Six Global Cities

General view of the Burj Khalifa and the downtown skyline in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, September 30, 2021. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem/File Photo Purchase
General view of the Burj Khalifa and the downtown skyline in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, September 30, 2021. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem/File Photo Purchase
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Satellite Observations Detect 'Urban Pulse' of Six Global Cities

General view of the Burj Khalifa and the downtown skyline in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, September 30, 2021. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem/File Photo Purchase
General view of the Burj Khalifa and the downtown skyline in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, September 30, 2021. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem/File Photo Purchase

While a city is not a living organism, it behaves very much like one. Its metabolic processes may be manifested in growth spurts, metamorphosis over time and even decay. Researchers using satellite imagery have tracked the vital signs of six major global cities, detecting a distinctive "urban pulse" in each.

The researchers looked at Dubai, Lagos, Mexico City, Mumbai, Seattle and Shenzhen using a new way to document dynamic changes unfolding in each of these cities in near real-time.

Historically, experts have relied upon aggregated and infrequent data to document urbanization, such as a yearly census, annual economic figures or a map showing how a city's footprint has changed over a decade - essentially using specific outcomes as metrics. But the scientists behind the new study said such an approach provides an incomplete understanding of a city and can miss the nuances as a metropolis evolves, Reuters reported.

"We got the inspiration from the human pulse, which tells us different information about our health than weight or height," said study lead author Zhe Zhu, a professor of remote sensing and director of the Global Environmental Remote Sensing Laboratory at the University of Connecticut's Department of Natural Resources and the Environment.

"The urban pulse measures the high-frequency process of development, and therefore we can spot early warning signs of economic stress or stagnation before they become full-blown crises," Zhu said. "We compare traditional metrics to looking at a heart attack - the outcome - whereas the 'urban pulse' is like monitoring the daily lifestyle and vital signs leading up to that heart attack - the process."

The biggest takeaway from the study, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is that urbanization is not smooth and steady, the researchers said.

"Urbanization is actually 'spiky,' meaning that it happens in abrupt, intense bursts, or 'cyclical,' moving through boom-and-rest phases that don't match annual seasons, or 'asynchronous,' as different neighborhoods in the exact same city develop at completely different, uncoordinated times," said study senior author Karen Seto, a Yale University professor of geography and urbanization science.

"This is important because, for decades, researchers have characterized cities through static maps," Seto said.

CITIES WITH DIFFERENT CONDITIONS

The researchers used dense and high-frequency satellite imagery from the US space agency NASA's Landsat and the European Space Agency's Sentinel-2 satellites. They tracked physical changes in the cities such as new building construction, demolition, major infrastructure improvements and expansion into green spaces.

"We selected cities with a wide range of political-economic conditions including the state-led development of Shenzhen, the market-driven growth of Seattle, the informal expansion of Lagos and the megaprojects of Dubai," Zhu said.

Shenzhen, formerly a small fishing village near Hong Kong that has become a megacity, exhibited the highest magnitude and intensity of growth, characterized by massive and clustered spikes reflecting rapid, state-led mobilization of capital.

Dubai, the most populous city in the United Arab Emirates, also showed huge growth.

In Nigeria's largest city Lagos, the "pulse" was highly fragmented, with long periods of inactivity punctuated by brief and intense surges.

Seattle, the largest metropolis in the US Pacific Northwest, reflected a market-driven pulse of redevelopment and densification.

Mumbai, India's financial and commercial powerhouse, and Mexico City, North America's most populous city, proved to be highly resilient and showed less disruption during global shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic than the others.

"Just as a human pulse reacts to illness, our data captured the exact moment COVID-19 triggered a synchronized 'cardiac arrest' in development worldwide. But the recovery was entirely unequal," Zhu said.

"Shenzhen saw a sharp, coordinated dip followed by a rapid rebound. Lagos experienced a muted pulse that transitioned into smaller, incremental changes. Meanwhile, cities like Mumbai and Mexico City showed much less of an impact. It showed us that global shocks don't manifest the exact same way in every city's 'body,'" Zhu said.

The researchers see practical applications for their method.

"For urban planners and policymakers, it functions as a diagnostic tool. Instead of reacting to a crisis after the fact, they can see exactly when and where a neighborhood's 'pulse' is slowing down and intervene early to prevent infrastructure collapse or economic decay. It also prevents cities from overheating their labor and material markets," Seto said.