Heterozygosity and craniofacial dimensions of Zapotec school children from a subsistence community in the valley of Oaxaca, southern Mexico. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Gene flow is associated with differences in craniofacial and postcranial dimensions among indigenous populations of southern Mexico. This study compares four craniofacial dimensions in 322 children from families which have an average inbreeding coefficient of 0.01 and 36 children from families which have an inbreeding coefficient of zero (more heterozygous) in a Zapotec speaking community. In addition, two indices were computed. With sex and chronological age constant, there is a statistically significant difference between more and less heterozygous children in bizygomatic diameter. Differences in biparietal diameter and fronto-occipital length reflect the same tendency. The differences probably reflect more an effect of heterozygosity on these dimensions than facial dissimilarity of the populations from which the new genetic materials were drawn because gene flow was from related groups of Indians (e.g., Mixtec) in southern Mexico. Hence, midface growth and overall normal size appear to be affected by fluctuation in level of heterozygosity.

published proceedings

  • J Craniofac Genet Dev Biol

author list (cited authors)

  • Little, B. B., Buschang, P. H., & Malina, R. M.

citation count

  • 3

complete list of authors

  • Little, BB||Buschang, PH||Malina, RM

publication date

  • January 1991