Modern humans may have some traces of genes from Neanderthals, but a new study suggests any breeding between the two was most likely a rare event.
The new computational model, based on DNA samples from modern humans in France and China, shows successful coupling happened at a rate of less than 2 percent.
The research suggests that either inter-species sex was taboo, or that the hybrid offspring had trouble surviving, according to the findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
There may have been "extremely strong barriers to gene flow between the two species because of a very low fitness of human-Neanderthal hybrids, a very strong avoidance of interspecific mating, or a combination," say study researchers at the University of Geneva and the University of Berne in Switzerland.
Between two and four per cent of the human genome can be linked to the long-extinct Neanderthals and their cavemen relatives.
The squat, low-browed Neanderthals lived in parts of Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East for up to 300,000 years. But all evidence of them disappears some 40,000 years ago, their last known refuge being Gibraltar.
Why they died out is a matter of some debate, because they co-existed alongside modern humans.
A study by French researchers published in the journal Science last month suggested that modern humans gleaned a competitive immune advantage from their liaisons with cavemen.
Read more at Discovery News
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