One Species, Many Names: Mitochondrial Evidence Unites Humans, Neanderthals, Denisovans, and Heidelbergensis

Published: 3 September 2025| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/ysrz5pyjc7.1
Contributor:
Raw Matt Matt Nailor

Description

One barcode. Four “species.” One story. Using the first 650 bp of the mitochondrial COI-5P gene, this study pulls public BOLD data for Homo sapiens, Neanderthals, Denisovans, and H. heidelbergensis and asks a deceptively simple question: Do these lineages form distinct barcode clusters—or a single maternal line? The answer is striking: all sequences fall into a single BOLD BIN, with >96% identity, no indels, and only minor SNP differences (≈7 for Neanderthals; ≈18–20 for Denisovans/Heidelbergensis). Reverting lineage-specific SNPs yields a consensus sequence identical to modern H. sapiens, consistent with a recent shared maternal ancestor after a severe bottleneck. Beyond the clustering result, we outline why barcode-level homogeneity challenges “splitter” taxonomies, summarize interbreeding evidence, and review population-size modeling that explains rapid loss/stabilization of archaic segments. Bottom line: within COI-5P, these hominins look like one interbreeding human family, not four barcode-separable species. What you’ll see inside Data: COI-5P (650 bp) from BOLD for H. sapiens, H. neanderthalensis, H. denisova, H. heidelbergensis Methods: MUSCLE alignment, BIN clustering (RESL), pairwise divergence, consensus reconstruction Key results: Single BIN; ≤3% divergence; SNP-only differences; modern-human consensus after reverting lineage SNPs Implications: Supports a shared recent maternal lineage and a lumper view of human variation; aligns with a post-bottleneck history and rapid stabilization of archaic DNA after limited admixture Why it matters Clarifies what COI-5P can—and can’t—resolve inside Homo Provides a clean, visual framework (BIN + consensus) for discussing “ancestral” labels vs. actual barcode evidence Offers testable predictions for other taxa and barcodes in post-bottleneck scenarios How to cite (APA) Nailor, M. (2025). One Species, Many Names: Mitochondrial COI-5P Barcode Unites Sapiens, Neanderthals, Denisovans, and Heidelbergensis. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17039432

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Categories

DNA, Taxonomy, Taxonomic Group, Archaic Homo Sapiens, Neanderthal, Fossil Taxonomy, Degraded DNA, DNA Content, Genetic Barcoding

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