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      Contrasting Patterns in Crop Domestication and Domestication Rates: Recent Archaeobotanical Insights from the Old World

      research-article
      *
      Annals of Botany
      Oxford University Press
      Domestication, cultivation, cereals, pulses, archaeobotany, Triticum, Hordeum, Oryza, Vigna, Pennisetum

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          Abstract

          Background

          Archaeobotany, the study of plant remains from sites of ancient human activity, provides data for studying the initial evolution of domesticated plants. An important background to this is defining the domestication syndrome, those traits by which domesticated plants differ from wild relatives. These traits include features that have been selected under the conditions of cultivation. From archaeological remains the easiest traits to study are seed size and in cereal crops the loss of natural seed dispersal.

          Scope

          The rate at which these features evolved and the ordering in which they evolved can now be documented for a few crops of Asia and Africa. This paper explores this in einkorn wheat ( Triticum monococcum) and barley ( Hordeum vulgare) from the Near East, rice ( Oryza sativa) from China, mung ( Vigna radiata) and urd ( Vigna mungo) beans from India, and pearl millet ( Pennisetum glaucum) from west Africa. Brief reference is made to similar data on lentils ( Lens culinaris), peas ( Pisum sativum), soybean ( Glycine max) and adzuki bean ( Vigna angularis). Available quantitative data from archaeological finds are compiled to explore changes with domestication. The disjunction in cereals between seed size increase and dispersal is explored, and rates at which these features evolved are estimated from archaeobotanical data. Contrasts between crops, especially between cereals and pulses, are examined.

          Conclusions

          These data suggest that in domesticated grasses, changes in grain size and shape evolved prior to non-shattering ears or panicles. Initial grain size increases may have evolved during the first centuries of cultivation, within perhaps 500–1000 years. Non-shattering infructescences were much slower, becoming fixed about 1000–2000 years later. This suggests a need to reconsider the role of sickle harvesting in domestication. Pulses, by contrast, do not show evidence for seed size increase in relation to the earliest cultivation, and seed size increase may be delayed by 2000–4000 years. This implies that conditions that were sufficient to select for larger seed size in Poaceae were not sufficient in Fabaceae. It is proposed that animal-drawn ploughs (or ards) provided the selection pressure for larger seeds in legumes. This implies different thresholds of selective pressure, for example in relation to differing seed ontogenetics and underlying genetic architecture in these families. Pearl millet ( Pennisetum glaucum) may show some similarities to the pulses in terms of a lag-time before truly larger-grained forms evolved.

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          Most cited references227

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          How fast was wild wheat domesticated?

          Prehistoric cultivation of wild wheat in the Fertile Crescent led to the selection of mutants with indehiscent (nonshattering) ears, which evolved into modern domestic wheat. Previous estimates suggested that this transformation was rapid, but our analyses of archaeological plant remains demonstrate that indehiscent domesticates were slow to appear, emerging approximately 9500 years before the present, and that dehiscent (shattering) forms were still common in cultivated fields approximately 7500 years before the present. Slow domestication implies that after cultivation began, wild cereals may have remained unchanged for a long period, supporting claims that agriculture originated in the Near East approximately 10,500 years before the present.
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            Anthropology. Autonomous cultivation before domestication.

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              The distribution, natural habitats and availability of wild cereals in relation to their domestication in the Near East: multiple events, multiple centres

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ann Bot
                annbot
                annbot
                Annals of Botany
                Oxford University Press
                0305-7364
                1095-8290
                October 2007
                10 May 2007
                10 May 2007
                : 100
                : 5
                : 903-924
                Affiliations
                Institute of Archaeology, simpleUniversity College London , 31–34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY, UK
                Author notes
                [* ]For correspondence. E-mail d.fuller@ 123456ucl.ac.uk
                Article
                mcm048
                10.1093/aob/mcm048
                2759199
                17495986
                37e352a6-9c80-4e01-acd7-803b47545df2
                © 2007 The Author(s)

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 20 September 2006
                : 8 December 2006
                : 31 January 2007
                Categories
                Articles
                Review

                Plant science & Botany
                vigna,pulses,oryza,archaeobotany,domestication,hordeum,cultivation,cereals,pennisetum,triticum
                Plant science & Botany
                vigna, pulses, oryza, archaeobotany, domestication, hordeum, cultivation, cereals, pennisetum, triticum

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