Genetic data for Cyprus PPNB is very limited: currently only three ancient individuals have produced analyzable DNA. Because the sample count is below ten, any population-level inference is preliminary and should be treated as hypothesis-generating rather than definitive.
That said, the available genomes tentatively show affinities with early Neolithic populations from the Levant and Anatolia rather than later Bronze Age or steppe-derived groups. This pattern is consistent with an island colonization model in which incoming farming groups from the Near East brought crop and animal domesticates to Cyprus. No robust, recurring Y-chromosome or mitochondrial haplogroup patterns can yet be established from three samples; published haplogroup assignments are either absent or underpowered to represent population frequencies.
Genetic signals also point to potential founder effects and increased genetic drift expected in small island populations. Over generations, such processes can amplify certain lineages and differentiate islanders from source populations even if initial affinities were close. Future sampling across multiple PPNB sites on Cyprus, combined with high-coverage genomes and isotopic data, will be essential to test patterns of kinship, mobility, and continuity with later Cypriot populations.