

Cesar Fortes-Lima: the Fulani out of the Green Sahara
Aug 10, 2025
Cesar Fortes-Lima, a human geneticist at Johns Hopkins University, dives into the intriguing genetic history of the Fulani people. He highlights the diversity within Fulani subpopulations, revealing their ties to North African ancestry. The conversation explores how lactase persistence evolved among the Fulani, reflecting their unique dietary habits. Fortes-Lima also discusses the historical migrations during the Green Sahara period and stresses the importance of diverse genomic research to represent underrepresented populations effectively.
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Two Decades Of Fieldwork
- Cesar Fortes-Lima spent ~20 years collecting 460 Fulani samples across 18 communities.
- He and collaborators travelled widely and secured local permits for safe fieldwork.
European Lactase Variant Via North Africa
- The Fulani lactase-persistence allele matches the European haplotype but arrived via North African groups.
- Cesar Fortes-Lima shows flanking-haplotype evidence points to Berber/Iberomaurasian intermediates.
Regional Structure Mirrors Dialects
- Large sampling reveals Fulani population structure aligns with dialects and geography.
- Cesar Fortes-Lima also detects a distinct genetic component linked to North African contact.