La Fundación Jaime González-Gordon ofrece cuatro becas para el desarrollo de Trabajos de Fin de Máster sobre Doñana

 

Los estudios se realizarán en colaboración y bajo el aval científico de la Estación Biológica de Doñana

La convocatoria está abierta hasta el 31 de enero

 

Un año más, la Fundación Jaime González-Gordon convoca cuatro becas para el desarrollo de proyectos de Investigación sobre el Parque Nacional de Doñana y su entorno dentro de un programa de Máster universitario. Esta convocatoria se desarrollará en colaboración y bajo el aval científico de la Estación Biológica de Doñana, instituto de investigación perteneciente al Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC).

Destinatarios

Estudiantes de programas de máster universitarios oficiales en universidades españolas o extranjeras durante el curso académico 2023-2024.

Temática

Abierto a todas las ramas de conocimiento. Los trabajos de máster deberán centrarse en el entorno de Doñana (no necesariamente el espacio protegido) pero no hay ninguna limitación en relación al campo temático (biología, antropología, historia, geología, arte …).

Dotación

• La beca consiste en una dotación de 1500€ que se transferirán al estudiante para su utilización en apoyo al desarrollo del proyecto.

• Si el proyecto implica trabajo de campo en Doñana, el beneficiario tendrá acceso a las instalaciones de la Institución Científico Técnica Singular ICTS-Doñana (http://icts.ebd.csic.es/en/web/icts-ebd/home ), incluyendo alojamiento.

• Si el proyecto implica la utilización de los laboratorios y servicios de la Estación Biológica de Doñana (http://www.ebd.csic.es/inici ), los servicios se cobrarían a coste reducido, como personal de la EBD-CSIC.

Para proyectos que impliquen trabajo en la ICTS-Doñana o en la EBD-CSIC, la persona beneficiaria deberá tener un tutor o un co-tutor de la Estación Biológica que se encargará de las solicitudes de acceso y del contacto con las responsables del espacio protegido.

Solicitud

Los candidatos deberán presentar la siguiente documentación (en castellano):

• Certificado académico oficial de las notas obtenidas durante el grado o la licenciatura.

• Curriculum vitae

• Carta de motivación

• Propuesta de proyecto. Longitud máxima: 2 páginas.

• Evidencia de estar matriculado o en proceso de inscripción en un programa de máster durante el

curso 2021-2022.

• Carta de apoyo firmada por el tutor si lo hubiese. En caso de no tener tutor y que la propuesta fuese seleccionada, y en los casos en los que el trabajo precise acceso a la ICTS-Doñana o a la EBD-CSIC y el tutor no fuese miembro de la EBD-CSIC, la Estación Biológica haría propuesta de posibles tutores o co-tutores.

Toda esta documentación se mandará por correo electrónico a la Fundación Jaime González Gordon (direccion@fundacionjaimegonzalezgordon.es) con copia a la Oficina de Coordinación de la Investigación de la EBD-CSIC (coordinacion@ebd.csic.es) no más tarde del 31 de enero de 2024.

Evaluación de solicitudes

Las propuestas se valorarán en el plazo de dos semanas desde la fecha límite de presentación. Para la evaluación se tendrá en cuenta el interés del proyecto y su calidad científica, la relevancia para Doñana, la capacidad aparente del candidato para llevar a cabo el proyecto. La comisión de selección podrá entrevistar a los candidatos durante el proceso de evaluación si así lo considera conveniente.

La valoración de los candidatos se hará de forma consensuada entre representantes de la Fundación y de la EBD-CSIC. La decisión será inapelable.

La resolución se comunicará a los candidatos por correo electrónico.

Compromiso de las personas beneficiarias

-Mandar copia del Trabajo Fin de Máster resultante del proyecto a la Fundación y a la EBD-CSIC, indicando la fecha de la defensa pública.

-Preparar un vídeo de 2-3 minutos de duración o un texto divulgativo presentando los resultados del trabajo. Estos materiales serán accesibles a través de las páginas web de la Fundación y/o de la EBD-CSIC.

-La persona beneficiaria se compromete a agradecer el apoyo de la Fundación en cualquier artículo  científico o comunicación en congreso que pudiese derivar del proyecto y mandará copia del trabajo publicado a la Fundación.

 



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Ice Age wolf DNA reveals dogs trace ancestry to two separate wolf populations

Credit: Jessica Rae Peto

Dogs are known to have originated from the gray wolf, with this domestication occurring during the Ice Age, at least 15,000 years ago. But where this happened, and if it occurred in one single location or in multiple places, is still unknown. Previous studies using the archaeological record and comparing the DNA of dogs and modern wolves have not found the answer. An international group of geneticists and archaeologists, led by the Francis Crick Institute and with the participation of Jennifer Leonard, a researcher at the Doñana Biological Station - CSIC, have found that the ancestry of dogs can be traced to at least two populations of ancient wolves. The work moves us a step closer to uncovering the mystery of where dogs underwent domestication, one of the biggest unanswered questions about human prehistory. 

In their study, published in Nature today (29 June), the researchers turned to ancient wolf genomes to further understanding of where the first dogs evolved from wolves. They analysed 72 ancient wolf genomes, spanning the last 100,000 years, from Europe, Siberia and North America. The remains came from previously excavated ancient wolves, with archaeologists from 38 institutions in 16 different countries contributing to the study. The remains included a full, perfectly preserved head from a Siberian wolf that lived 32,000 years ago. Nine different ancient DNA labs then collaborated on generating DNA sequence data from the wolves.

Two different sources

By analysing the genomes, the researchers found that both early and modern dogs are more genetically similar to ancient wolves in Asia than those in Europe, suggesting a domestication somewhere in the east. However, they also found evidence that two separate populations of wolves contributed DNA to dogs. Early dogs from north-eastern Europe, Siberia and the Americas appear to have a single, shared origin from the eastern source. But early dogs from the Middle East, Africa and southern Europe appear to have some ancestry from another source related to wolves in the Middle East, in addition to the eastern source.

One possible explanation for this dual ancestry is that wolves underwent domestication more than once, with the different populations then mixing together. Another possibility is that domestication happened only once, and that the dual ancestry is due to these early dogs then mixing with wild wolves. It is not currently possible to determine which of these two scenarios occurred. 

Anders Bergström, co-first author and post-doctoral researcher in the Ancient Genomics lab at the Crick, says: "Through this project we have greatly increased the number of sequenced ancient wolf genomes, allowing us to create a detailed picture of wolf ancestry over time, including around the time of dog origins."

"By trying to place the dog piece into this picture, we found that dogs derive ancestry from at least two separate wolf populations – an eastern source that contributed to all dogs and a separate more westerly source, that contributed to some dogs."

The role of Andalusian wolfs and dogs

The team are continuing the hunt for a close ancient wolf ancestor of dogs, which could reveal more precisely where domestication most likely took place. They are now focusing on genomes from other locations not included in this study, including more southerly regions. The Doñana Biological Station is continuing to collaborate in this research line. The next steps are both more extensive sampling of ancient Pleistocene wolves and Paleolithic and Chalcolithic dogs. "These samples are particularly important since the oldest gray wolf fossils are from southern Europe", explains Jennifer Leonard. "It is particularly difficult to get ancient DNA from ancient Andalucian bones because of the environment here which favors degradation of DNA." The ongoing collaboration between EBD and IAPH is particularly important to understand the place of Andalucian wolves and dogs in pre-history.

As the 72 ancient wolf genomes spanned around 30,000 generations, it was possible to look back and build a timeline of how wolf DNA has changed, tracing natural selection in action.

For example, they observed that over a period of around 10,000 years, one gene variant went from being very rare to being present in every wolf, and is still present in all wolves and dogs today. The variant affects a gene, IFT88, which is involved in the development of bones in the skull and jaw. It is possible that the spread of this variant could have been driven by a change in the types of prey available during the Ice Age, giving an advantage to wolves with a certain head shape, but the gene could also have other unknown functions in wolves.

Pontus Skoglund, senior author and group leader of the Ancient Genomics lab at the Crick, says: "This is the first time scientists have directly tracked natural selection in a large animal over a time-scale of 100,000 years, seeing evolution play out in real time rather than trying to reconstruct it from DNA today. We found several cases where mutations spread to the whole wolf species, which was possible because the species was highly connected over large distances. This connectivity is perhaps a reason why wolves managed to survive the Ice Age while many other large carnivores vanished." According to the researcher, similar whole-genome time series from the Ice Age, in humans or other animals, could provide new information about how evolution happens.

"This study highlights the dynamic evolutionary history of gray wolves across their range, and suggests human assisted geneflow could be appropriate to overcome human caused population fragmentation", concludes Jennifer Leonard. "Humans, wolves, and dogs have a long, intertwined history, so losing wolves as a functional component of our ecosystem would have cultural as well as ecological consequences". 

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Reference:

Anders Bergström et al. Gray wolf genomic history reveals a dual ancestry of dogs. Nature. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-04824-9

 

Contacto:

Comunicación EBD

outreach@ebd.csic.es

 

 

 


https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-04824-9