Pigs are known, sometimes celebrated, as among the most intelligent of farm animals. Now, a new 大香蕉视频-led study provides evidence that pigs were first domesticated from wild boars in South China approximately 8,000 years ago.
China has long been considered one of the locations for original pig domestication, but tracking the initial process has always been challenging. The study is the first to find that pigs were eating humans鈥 cooked foods and waste. The results are reported in the .
Domestication of some animals, including pigs, has often been associated with the Neolithic period when humans began their transition from foraging to farming around 10,000 years ago.
Wild boars are large, aggressive beasts that live independently, many in the forest, rooting for food from the undergrowth. They have larger heads and mouths, and bigger teeth, than domestic pigs.
鈥淲hile most wild boars are naturally aggressive, some are more friendly and less afraid of people, which are the ones that may live alongside humans,鈥 says lead author , an assistant professor of anthropology at 大香蕉视频. 鈥淟iving with humans gave them easy access to food, so they no longer needed to maintain their robust physiques.鈥
鈥淥ver time, their bodies became smaller, and their brains also became smaller by about one-third,鈥 says Wang.

To study the domestication of pigs and other animals, archaeologists have often relied on examining the sizes and shapes of skeletal structures to mark the morphological change over time.
鈥淏ut this method can be problematic because the reduction in body size likely occurred later in the domestication process,鈥 says Wang. 鈥淲hat probably came first were behavioral changes, like becoming less aggressive and more tolerant of humans,鈥 says Wang.
So, for the study, the researchers used a different method and documented what the pigs had been eating over their lifespan using the molar teeth of 32 pig specimens. Through a microfossil analysis of the pig teeth, they examined the mineralized plaque, known as dental calculus, from two of the earliest sites where humans lived at least 8,000 years ago at Jingtoushan and Kuahuqiao in the Lower Yangtze River region of South China.
The sites were waterlogged, which helped preserve the organic materials.
The analysis found a total of 240 starch granules present. It revealed that pigs had eaten cooked foods鈥攔ice and yams鈥攁s well as an unidentified tuber, acorns, and wild grasses. 鈥淭hese are plants that were present in the environment at that time and were found in human settlements,鈥 says Wang.
Prior research has found rice at both sites with intensive rice cultivation at Kuahuqiao, which is located farther inland and has greater access to freshwater than coastal-based Jingtoushan. Other studies have also shown starch residues in grinding stones and pottery from Kuahuqiao.
鈥淲e can assume that pigs do not cook food for themselves, so they were probably getting the food from humans either by being fed by them and/or scavenging human food,鈥 says Wang.
Human parasite eggs, specifically, that of whipworm, aka Trichuris鈥攁 parasite egg that can mature inside human digestive systems鈥攚ere also found in the pig dental calculus. These yellow-brown football-shaped parasite eggs were found in 16 of the pig teeth specimens. The pigs must have been eating human feces, or drinking water or eating food grown in dirt contaminated by such feces, according to the study.

鈥淧igs are known for their habit of eating human waste, so that is additional evidence that these pigs were probably living with humans or having a very close relationship with them,鈥 says Wang.
The researchers also conducted a statistical analysis of the dental structures of the Kuahuqiao and Jingtoushan pig specimens, showing that some had small teeth similar to those of modern domestic populations in China.
鈥淲ild boars were probably attracted to human settlements as people started settling down and began growing their own food,鈥 says Wang. 鈥淭hese settlements created a large amount of waste, and that waste attracts scavengers for food, which in turn fosters selection mechanisms that favored animals willing to live alongside humans.鈥
In animal domestication, this process is called a 鈥渃ommensal pathway,鈥 where the animal is attracted to human settlements rather than the humans trying to actively recruit the animals.

鈥淥ur study shows that some wild boars took the first step towards domestication by scavenging human waste,鈥 says Wang.
The data supports that early interaction also involved domestic pigs under active human management, representing a 鈥減rey pathway鈥 in the domestication process.
The research also sheds light on the likely relationship between pig domestication and the transmission of parasitic diseases in early sedentary communities.
Yiyi Tang, Guarini, a graduate student in Wang鈥檚 lab; Yunfei Zheng, Leping Jiang, and Guoping Sun at the Zhejiang Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology; Xiaolin Ma at Henan Museum; and Yanfeng Hou at Henan Provincial Institute of Cultural Heritage and Archaeology contributed to the study.