“…With the emergence of agriculture and, more generally speaking, the Neolithic transition, the human niche construction caused a major ecological disturbance, with the opening and fragmentation of the landscape, the emergence and spread of domesticated animals and plants from several independent centres across Eurasia, the protection of livestock from predators and competitors, and the dispersal of invasive species and pathogens (Ellis et al, 2021;Sullivan et al, 2017). To date, the influence of the Neolithic niche construction has been mainly explored through human-induced species distribution (Boivin et al, 2016;Cucchi et al, 2020;Vigne, 1999), and over the temporal depth of the direct human influence over species during the process of animal domestication (Ameen et al, 2019;Brassard et al, 2022;Clutton-Brock, 1992;Cucchi et al, 2021;Fages et al, 2019;Frantz et al, 2020;Larson and Fuller, 2014;Zeder, 2015). Yet, its consequences on non-domestic species evolution remain to be fully documented and understood (Erlandson et al, 2016;Sarrazin and Lecomte, 2016).…”