Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Domestication and the evolution of crops: variable syndromes, complex genetic architectures, and ecological entanglements

Ornob Alam, Michael D. Purugganan

The Plant Cell · 2024

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Summary

Domestication can be considered a specialized mutualism in which a domesticator exerts control over the reproduction or propagation (fitness) of a domesticated species to gain resources or services. The evolution of crops by human-associated selection provides a powerful set of models to study recent evolutionary adaptations and their genetic bases. Moreover, the domestication and dispersal of crops such as rice, maize, and wheat during the Holocene transformed human social and political organization by serving as the key mechanism by which human societies fed themselves. Here we review major themes and identify emerging questions in three fundamental areas of crop domestication research: domestication phenotypes and syndromes, genetic architecture underlying crop evolution, and the ecolog

Subject
Cereals & grains
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1093/plcell/koae013
Catalogue ID
SNmojxdanu-azhzev
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