Until recently, domestication has been interpreted as a rapid process with little predomestication cultivation and a relatively rapid rise of the domestication syndrome. This interpretation has had a profound effect on the biological framework within which investigations into crop origins have been carried out. A major underlying assumption has been that artificial selection pressures were substantially stronger than natural selection pressures, resulting in genetic patterns of diversity that reflect genetic independence of geographic localities. Recent archaeobotanical evidence has overturned the notion of a rapid transition, resulting in a protracted model that undermines these assumptions. Conclusions of genome-wide multilocus studies re...
Genetics has long been used as a source of evidence to understand domestication origins. A recent sh...
A combination of genetics and archaeology is revealing the complexity of the relationships between c...
and approved November 15, 2013 (received for review September 11, 2013) Recent increases in archaeob...
As genetic and archaeological evidence has developed over the past few years, it has become apparent...
Archaeobotanical evidence for Near Eastern einkorn wheat, barley, and Chinese rice suggests that the...
Humans have domesticated hundreds of plant and animal species as sources of food, fiber, forage, and...
The evidence from ancient crops over the past decade challenges some of our most basic assumptions a...
Genetics has long been used as a source of evidence to understand domestication origins. A recent sh...
Domestication is the process of evolutionary change that results in the phenotypic and genetic diffe...
Current debate concerns the pace at which domesticated plants emerged from cultivated wild populatio...
AbstractDomestication is one of the most fundamental changes in the evolution of human societies. Th...
Recent increases in archaeobotanical evidence offer insights into the processes of plant domesticati...
ABSTRACT: Phenotypic variation has been manipulated by humans during crop domestication, which occur...
Current debate concerns the pace at which domesticated plants emerged from cultivated wild populatio...
Domestication is a human‐induced selection process that imprints the genomes of domesticated populat...
Genetics has long been used as a source of evidence to understand domestication origins. A recent sh...
A combination of genetics and archaeology is revealing the complexity of the relationships between c...
and approved November 15, 2013 (received for review September 11, 2013) Recent increases in archaeob...
As genetic and archaeological evidence has developed over the past few years, it has become apparent...
Archaeobotanical evidence for Near Eastern einkorn wheat, barley, and Chinese rice suggests that the...
Humans have domesticated hundreds of plant and animal species as sources of food, fiber, forage, and...
The evidence from ancient crops over the past decade challenges some of our most basic assumptions a...
Genetics has long been used as a source of evidence to understand domestication origins. A recent sh...
Domestication is the process of evolutionary change that results in the phenotypic and genetic diffe...
Current debate concerns the pace at which domesticated plants emerged from cultivated wild populatio...
AbstractDomestication is one of the most fundamental changes in the evolution of human societies. Th...
Recent increases in archaeobotanical evidence offer insights into the processes of plant domesticati...
ABSTRACT: Phenotypic variation has been manipulated by humans during crop domestication, which occur...
Current debate concerns the pace at which domesticated plants emerged from cultivated wild populatio...
Domestication is a human‐induced selection process that imprints the genomes of domesticated populat...
Genetics has long been used as a source of evidence to understand domestication origins. A recent sh...
A combination of genetics and archaeology is revealing the complexity of the relationships between c...
and approved November 15, 2013 (received for review September 11, 2013) Recent increases in archaeob...