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Sainbileg Undrakhbold

Researcher at National University of Mongolia

Publications -  9
Citations -  1012

Sainbileg Undrakhbold is an academic researcher from National University of Mongolia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Species richness & Domestication. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications receiving 716 citations.

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Worldwide evidence of a unimodal relationship between productivity and plant species richness

Lauchlan H. Fraser, +62 more
- 17 Jul 2015 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, by using data from coordinated surveys conducted throughout grasslands worldwide and comprising a wide range of site productivities, the authors provide evidence in support of the humped-back model (HBM) pattern at both global and regional extents.
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137 ancient human genomes from across the Eurasian steppes

Peter de Barros Damgaard, +83 more
- 09 May 2018 - 
TL;DR: The genomes of 137 ancient and 502 modern human genomes illuminate the population history of the Eurasian steppes after the Bronze Age and document the replacement of Indo-European speakers of West Eurasian ancestry by Turkic-speaking groups of East Asian ancestry.
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Ancient genomes revisit the ancestry of domestic and Przewalski’s horses

Charleen Gaunitz, +58 more
- 06 Apr 2018 - 
TL;DR: Data indicate that Przewalski’s horses are the feral descendants of horses herded at Botai and not truly wild horses, which indicates that a massive genomic turnover underpins the expansion of the horse stock that gave rise to modern domesticates, which coincides with large-scale human population expansions during the Early Bronze Age.
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Tracking Five Millennia of Horse Management with Extensive Ancient Genome Time Series

Antoine Fages, +135 more
- 30 May 2019 - 
TL;DR: This extensive dataset allows us to assess the modern legacy of past equestrian civilizations and finds that two extinct horse lineages existed during early domestication, and the development of modern breeding impacted genetic diversity more dramatically than the previous millennia of human management.
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Not a melting pot: Plant species aggregate in their non‐native range

TL;DR: The strong differences between the native (home) and non‐native (away) range in species co‐occurrence patterns are evidence that the way in which species associate with resident communities in their non-native range is not species dependent, but is instead a property of being away from their native range.