Project properties

Title "The black pages of colonial history investigated through the genomic analysis of African rice"
Group Biosystematics Group
Project type thesis
Credits 24-36
Supervisor(s) Dr. Robin van Velzen
Examiner(s) Prof. Dr. Eric Schranz (Biosystematics), Prof. Dr. Tinde van Andel (Naturalis)
Contact info Interested or questions? Send an email to: robin.vanvelzen@wur.nl
Begin date 2024/05/01
End date 2025/11/30
Description Suriname is home to a large community of Maroons, who descend from enslaved Africans who escaped the plantations during colonial times. The Maroons have many traditions that connect them to Africa. An important one for their survival is their long traditional farming history of African (black) rice, Oryza glaberrima. These African rice varieties were carried overseas by slave ships during colonial times.

The objective of this project is to trace the geographical origin of the African rice varieties that are grown by the Maroons, using population genomics approaches.

You will:
- analyse the population genomic structure of African (black) rice varieties with various clustering methods (e.g.: principal component analysis, ADMIXTURE)
- compare the genomic ancestry of the African rice varieties from Maroon communities in Suriname to varieties in Africa to find the closest genomic relatives with Patterson F-statistics.
- interpret and modify bash scripts bash for running genomic analyses, and R scripts for plotting figures (please bring some knowledge and/or a lot of motivation to learn this).
Used skills population genomics, bioinformatics, colonial history
Requirements Basic knowledge of (population) genomics, bioinformatics (unix, R), an interest in colonial history, and looking for an academic challenge.