“…Together with its inheritance from father to son, it is a highly informative marker for the paternal origin of species, populations or individuals with a much stronger phylogeographic differentiation than observed for mitochondrial or autosomal DNA. The highly informative Y-chromosomal markers are now widely exploited in population-genetic studies of humans (Jobling and Tyler-Smith, 2017; Kivisild, 2017), cattle (Edwards et al, 2011; Xia et al, 2019), horse (Wallner et al, 2017; Wutke et al, 2018; Felkel et al, 2019a) water buffalo (Zhang et al, 2016), sheep (Meadows and Kijas, 2009; Zhang et al, 2014), camel (Felkel et al, 2019b), pigs (Guirao-Rico et al, 2018) and dogs (Natanaelsson et al, 2006; Oetjens et al, 2018).…”