The genetic signal from Suogang is concise: both recovered male individuals carry Y-chromosome haplogroup O. Haplogroup O is widespread across East and Southeast Asia today and is often associated with agricultural and coastal populations in late prehistoric contexts. In this Penghu sample, the presence of O suggests continuity or gene flow with mainland East Asian source populations, reinforcing archaeological impressions of island–mainland connectivity.
Crucially, mitochondrial haplogroups were not reported for these two samples, leaving maternal lineages and sex-biased migration patterns unknown. With only two individuals analyzed, population-level inferences are preliminary. Archaeogenetic studies in adjacent regions during the Late Neolithic and the later island Southeast Asian sequence often reveal complex mixtures—local hunter-gatherer ancestry, incoming farmers, and maritime-mediated gene flow—so any single-site finding must be interpreted within that broader tapestry.
Future aDNA from more individuals and from both sexes will be necessary to test whether Penghu communities were genetically continuous with nearby coastal populations, were a contact zone with mixed ancestries, or represented a distinctive island-adapted genetic profile. For now, the Y‑DNA O signal is a compelling hint of mainland ties, not a definitive account.