I have 0.5% of an ancestry that my sister doesn’t have at all! How can that happen? - The Tech Interactive (2024)

This is such a great question. There is no reason to expect that the both of you should have 0.5% African ancestry even though you came from the same parents. Your result is a perfectly reasonable one.

With such a low percentage, it’s actually possible that you don’t have any African ancestry at all! Anything below 1% or so might be a false positive. Percentages that low are notoriously hard to interpret, and I wouldn’t put too much faith in it.

But it also is possible for you to have a small amount of African ancestry while your sister doesn’t. Even though you and your sister both inherited your DNA from the same two people, you didn’t inherit thesameDNA. For that reason, it’s not uncommon for siblings to have different ancestry results.

This goes against the way most of us think of these things. For example, in my family, we are always quoting what percentage of Native American ancestry we have.

We had a distant relative who was from the Cherokee tribe. Because of that, we say that my dad is 1/8thNative American and I am 1/16th. While this is true from a genealogical standpoint, it may not be true from a DNA one.

Because of how DNA is passed on, I may have no Cherokee ancestry left in my DNA. This is even though my relative really was Cherokee. And even though we really do get half our DNA from our moms and half from our dads.

What we need to know to understand results like yours is that the half the DNA we get from each parent is chosen at random. So, for example, it may be that my grandpa just happened to pass no DNA with Cherokee ancestry to my dad. A DNA test would say he had no Native American in his heritage even though our family tree clearly does.

This sort of thing becomes more and more likely as the amount of DNA gets smaller and smaller. Once we are dealing with 0.5% of something, we are really talking about one or maybe two tiny bits of DNA. In fact, it is so small each child might have just a 50% chance of inheriting any of it from their parent(s). And if a child happened to get half or even less of that 0.5%, the test might not even see the DNA any more.

What I’ll do for the rest of the answer is use a few diagrams to try to make it a bit clearer how you and your sister could end up with different amounts of African ancestry. I’ll use my DNA results as an example.

I have 0.5% of an ancestry that my sister doesn’t have at all! How can that happen? - The Tech Interactive (1)

A Touch of African

Our DNA is stored in chromosomes. Most people have 23 pairs of chromosomes for a total of 46.

One chromosome from each pair comes from mom and one from dad. This is where the 50% of your DNA from mom and 50% of your DNA from dad comes from.

Here is what my chromosomes look like from an ancestry point of view:

I have 0.5% of an ancestry that my sister doesn’t have at all! How can that happen? - The Tech Interactive (2)

As you can see I have 22 pairs of chromosomes labeled 1-22 and then a lone X chromosome. In reality, I have a Y to go with my X but this isn’t shown in this ancestry test. If I were female, I’d have two X’s. One of each pair of chromosomes came from my mom and one from my dad.

I have almost entirely European ancestry, which is shown in blue. But you can also see a trace amount of Sub-Saharan African ancestry, which is shown in red. Let’s zoom in on the pair of chromosome 11’s:

I have 0.5% of an ancestry that my sister doesn’t have at all! How can that happen? - The Tech Interactive (3)

Looking at me you’d never guess there was an African American in my family tree. But that is what that red at the tip of one of my chromosome 11’s suggests. Somewhere on my mom’s or dad’s side of the family, there may have been an African ancestor. (Probably dad for family history reasons).

OK, now let’s imagine what might happen with this chromosome pair and my kids. In a simple world, each child would have a 50% chance of getting the top one and a 50% chance of getting the bottom one. This would mean that each child would have a 50% chance of inheriting a bit of African ancestry from me and, of course, a 50% chance of not inheriting my African ancestry.

This would be enough to explain your situation. One of your parents had one chromosome in a pair that had some African ancestry. You happened to get this chromosome and your sister got the other one. Simple.

Except of course, as any reader of our answers knows, nothing in biology is ever that simple! To get at what actually happens, we need to go a little deeper into how a parent’s DNA is distributed into sperm and eggs.

This explanation won’t change the basics of what we’ve already talked about. But it can show how other results are possible. Like how you and your sister might have each ended up with 0.25% African ancestry.

Uniquely Yours

When we pass our DNA down, we don’t actually pass down one of our two chromosomes in each pair. Instead we pass down a chromosome that is a mix of the two in the pair. The DNA in each pair is swapped in a process calledrecombination.

Let’s focus on my pair of chromosome 11’s. Here is one way the DNA might have swapped:

I have 0.5% of an ancestry that my sister doesn’t have at all! How can that happen? - The Tech Interactive (4)

I gave one of the chromosomes a dashed line so we could tell the two apart. The X between the two in the pair is a common way to show where the DNA was swapped between the two chromosomes.

As you can see, here it doesn’t matter that the DNA recombined. Each child still has a 50% chance of getting all of my African ancestry and a 50% chance of getting none.

But imagine the DNA swapped like this instead:

I have 0.5% of an ancestry that my sister doesn’t have at all! How can that happen? - The Tech Interactive (5)

Now each child will get a bit of African ancestry. They will be down to 0.05% but it will be there (although it might be a small enough bit that the test can’t see it).

A recombination that happens right there, right in the middle of the part of my DNA that shows African ancestry would not happen very often. Where DNA gets swapped is pretty random too.

So the most likely outcome for my kids at this point is an all or none one. They will each have a 50% chance for getting my 0.1% African ancestry or a 50% chance of getting none.

This sort of scenario probably describes your situation as well. You happened to get a chromosome that has a bit of African ancestry and your sister got a chromosome without it.

I have 0.5% of an ancestry that my sister doesn’t have at all! How can that happen? - The Tech Interactive (2024)

FAQs

I have 0.5% of an ancestry that my sister doesn’t have at all! How can that happen? - The Tech Interactive? ›

Even though you and your sister both inherited your DNA from the same two people, you didn't inherit the same DNA. For that reason, it's not uncommon for siblings to have different ancestry results.

What does 0.5 mean in a DNA test? ›

A prior probability of 0.5 is the standard approach used in relationship analysis since it assumes that before considering the DNA results, it is equally likely that the man tested is, or not the father.

Can siblings have different ancestry percentages? ›

Many people believe that siblings' ethnicities are identical because they share parents, but full siblings share only about half of their DNA with one another. Because of this, siblings' ethnicities can vary.

How many generations back is 5 percent DNA? ›

Great-grandparents contribute about 1/8. And 2nd-Great-Grandparents contribute about 1/16 — which is near 5%. People share about 50% of DNA with their siblings, and about 1/2*1/2*50% = 12.5% with their 1st cousins. They share about 3.125% of DNA with 2nd cousins, 0.78125% with 3rd cousins, and so on.

Can you be 0% related to a sibling? ›

Statistically, siblings could theoretically be anywhere from 0 to 100% related if they got none or all of the same alleles.

Why would a sibling DNA test be inconclusive? ›

Inconclusive results occurs in only a small number of DNA tests. Causes of inconclusive results in include: The DNA markers that show matches between test participants are very common in the general population. As a result, the matches do not provide enough evidence to confirm if a biological relationship exists.

What percentage of DNA should half siblings share? ›

Full siblings share approximately 50% of their DNA, while half-siblings share approximately 25% of their DNA.

Why does Ancestry say my brother is my cousin? ›

Someone in this category is likely a brother or sister who shares both biological parents with you. In the rare situation that you have a half sibling who is also your first cousin, they may appear in this category too.

Can two biological siblings have different DNA? ›

It seems like brothers and sisters should have the same ancestry background. After all, they both got half their DNA from mom and half from dad. But because of how DNA is passed on, it is possible for two siblings to have some big differences in their ancestry at the DNA level.

Is 5% ethnicity a lot? ›

For the most part, when you initially explore your ethnicity results, don't worry about ethnicity percentages below 5% in most or 2% in some cases. The difficulty in determining where these small percentages appear on your family tree is quite challenging.

How far back is 17% DNA? ›

In really broad terms we get 50% of our DNA from our father and 50% from our mother. So, we get 25% from each of our grandparents. This means we get approximately 17% from our 8 great grandparents. This is true if each ancestor contributed equal amounts to the sample.

At what point are cousins not related? ›

When cousins are in different generations than each other, we say they're removed. "Removed" is like “grand” and “great,” but with cousins. Once removed means a difference of one generation, twice removed means a difference of two generations, and so forth.

Can Ancestry DNA be wrong? ›

AncestryDNA currently looks at over 700,000 locations in a person's DNA. And they report an accuracy rate of >99% for each location tested. So if we combine those numbers together, AncestryDNA would make a correct call at about 693,000 locations. Or to flip it around, it might make a mistake at up to 7,000 locations.

How much DNA would a half-sister share? ›

Half-siblings will share about half as much DNA as full siblings, but again, this is on average and the percentage can vary due to recombination.

What percentage of DNA is significant? ›

You share around 50% of your DNA with your parents and children, 25% with your grandparents, grandchildren, uncles, aunts, nieces, and nephews, and 12.5% with your first cousins. A match of 3% or more can be helpful for your genealogical research — but sometimes even less.

Is 0.5 DNA a lot? ›

Once we are dealing with 0.5% of something, we are really talking about one or maybe two tiny bits of DNA. In fact, it is so small each child might have just a 50% chance of inheriting any of it from their parent(s).

How do I read my DNA test results? ›

The DNA test report you will receive shows numbers (in the first column) that indicate each of the 21 loci involved in the DNA testing process. The columns marked “allele” on the DNA test report contain numbers indicating the two alleles found at each locus (or one number if they are the same size).

How far back is 2% DNA? ›

How many generations back is 2% DNA? To find where you get your 2 percent DNA, you will have to search back to about 5 or 6 generations. This would be your great 4x great-grandparents. To figure this out, you will need to use the 50% DNA inheritance rule.

What does less than 1 percent DNA mean? ›

You can't inherit more than half of an ancestor's DNA

The chart below shows probable (but not necessarily actual) percentages of genes you may have inherited from ancestors going back four generations. At seven generations back, less than 1% of your DNA is likely to have come from any given ancestor.

References

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