“…A different pattern occurs in African populations; African and African American show a frequency of 7-10 % (Ho et al, 2009[49]; Mwenifumbo et al, 2008[87]; Nakajima et al, 2006[91], 2004[95]; Schoedel et al, 2004[117]), but in populations with a more conserved African component as Ghanaian (5.7 % (Gyamfi et al, 2005[45])) and Ethiopian (2.8 % (Aklillu et al, 2014[1])) the frequency is lower. Amerindian populations such as Canadian natives (15.5 % (Schoedel et al, 2004[117])) and Alaskan Yupik (8.9 % (Binnington et al, 2012[16])) had a heterogeneous frequency, which was the same as American mestizo populations such as Brazilian (5.7 % (Vasconcelos et al, 2005[139])), Ecuadorian (10.3 % (Soriano et al, 2011[124])), Mexican (16.4 % (Svyryd et al, 2015[126])) and other Hispanics (7.1 % (Benowitz et al, 2006[13])). The only population in Oceania to report this allele is the native population Māori from New Zealand with 19 % (Lea et al, 2008[71]).…”