Abstract
Heat-stress resilience is vital for poultry in tropical/subtropical regions where high temperatures impair productivity. Ake chickens, as the only naked-neck chicken breed in China, exhibit robust resistance to heat stress, but this breed lacks clarity in its genetic origins. This study utilized the next-generation sequencing data from 22 chicken breeds to conduct phylogenetic and population analyses. Gene flow analysis revealed a gene migration event from Iranian naked-neck chickens and Indian local breeds to Ake chickens, and population separation estimates suggested that the naked-neck gene was introduced to China around 500-600 years ago. NJ-tree, PCA, and population structure analyses showed that Ake chickens cluster with Yunnan native breeds, which diverged only 100-200 years ago. A selective sweep in the candidate region on chromosome 3 (97.0-97.37 Mb) showed elevated genetic differentiation (F(ST)) and reduced nucleotide diversity (π) compared to the genome-wide average, indicating rapid fixation of the trait under natural/artificial selection. Demographic reconstruction indicated that the current effective size of Ake chickens is stable at 2000-3000 individuals. These findings deepen our understanding of Ake chicken evolution and provide valuable insights for conservation and the development of heat-stress-resistant poultry breeds.