GENETIC-VARIATION AND RACIAL ADMIXTURE IN THE MISKITO OF THE SOUTHERNMOSQUITO SHORE, NICARAGUA

Citation
J. Azofeifa et al., GENETIC-VARIATION AND RACIAL ADMIXTURE IN THE MISKITO OF THE SOUTHERNMOSQUITO SHORE, NICARAGUA, Revista de biologia tropical, 46(1), 1998, pp. 157-165
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
ISSN journal
00347744
Volume
46
Issue
1
Year of publication
1998
Pages
157 - 165
Database
ISI
SICI code
0034-7744(1998)46:1<157:GARAIT>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
A survey of the electrophoretic variation at eleven loci red-blood cel l enzymes, hemoglobins and serum proteins was performed on a sample of 59 Miskitos stemming from the southernmost part of the Mosquito shore of Nicaragua. Seven loci, ALE, alpha-, beta-, gamma-globins, LDHA, LD HB, and TPI were monomorphic; AP1, CP, HP and TF were polymorphic repr esenting a proportion of polymorphic loci (P) of 0.364 and an average heterozygosity ((H) over cap) of 0.077. Both values are within a range covered by ten Chibchan tribes of Costa Pica and Panama evaluated for the same loci -(P) = 0.364-0.182; ((H) over cap) = 0.104-0.052-. The data allowed an estimation of minimum (m(l) = 0.0), mean (m(m) = 7.34) and maximum (m(s) = 21.9) percentages of racial admixture with blacks . For comparison, admixture was also calculated from the data -mainly blood groups- of a previous survey performed in 1960 by A. Matson and his group on a sample of a region near the border between Nicaragua an d Honduras; results (m(l) = 6.05), (m(m) = 11.0) and (m(s) = 18.1). Th e values showed no statistical difference, for the mean estimates, und er the assumption that the non-Indian alleles are Poisson-distributed (P=0.42). The documentation of what is supposed to be the beginning of the racial admixture of the Miskito with blacks in 1641 permitted the calculation of the rate of admixture per generation -generation lengt h: 27 years-; its maximum value lies between 1.68 and 1.91 percent. Th ese results indicate that the Miskito gene pool has a preponderance of features characteristic of Amerindian populations.