and approved November 15, 2013 (received for review September 11, 2013) Recent increases in archaeobotanical evidence offer insights into the processes of plant domestication and agricultural origins, which evolved in parallel in several world regions. Many different crop species underwent convergent evolution and acquired domestication syndrome traits. For a growing number of seed crop species, these traits can be quantified by proxy from archaeological evidence, providing measures of the rates of change during domestication. Among domestication traits, nonshattering cereal ears evolved more quickly in general than seed size. Nevertheless, most domestication traits show similarly slow rates of phenotypic change over several centuries to mi...
Domestication, or the evolutionary adaptation of organisms to anthropogenic ecosystems, is a key are...
We synthesise the results of a large programme of plant ecological research to investigate the selec...
It is difficult to overstate the cultural and biological impacts that the domestication of plants an...
Recent increases in archaeobotanical evidence offer insights into the processes of plant domesticati...
Background Archaeobotany, the study of plant remains from sites of ancient human activity, provides ...
The evidence from ancient crops over the past decade challenges some of our most basic assumptions a...
As genetic and archaeological evidence has developed over the past few years, it has become apparent...
Ranging between 11,000 and 4,000 years ago, several independent origins of agriculture appeared, tho...
Humans have domesticated hundreds of plant and animal species as sources of food, fiber, forage, and...
Domestication is the process by which plants or animals evolved to fit a human-managed environment, ...
The origins of agriculture involved pathways of domestication in which human behaviours and plant ge...
Abstract: The first domestications of plants and animals, which occurred between 10 K years and 5 K ...
AbstractDomestication is one of the most fundamental changes in the evolution of human societies. Th...
Until recently, domestication has been interpreted as a rapid process with little predomestication c...
AbstractThe colonization of the human environment by plants, and the consequent evolution of domesti...
Domestication, or the evolutionary adaptation of organisms to anthropogenic ecosystems, is a key are...
We synthesise the results of a large programme of plant ecological research to investigate the selec...
It is difficult to overstate the cultural and biological impacts that the domestication of plants an...
Recent increases in archaeobotanical evidence offer insights into the processes of plant domesticati...
Background Archaeobotany, the study of plant remains from sites of ancient human activity, provides ...
The evidence from ancient crops over the past decade challenges some of our most basic assumptions a...
As genetic and archaeological evidence has developed over the past few years, it has become apparent...
Ranging between 11,000 and 4,000 years ago, several independent origins of agriculture appeared, tho...
Humans have domesticated hundreds of plant and animal species as sources of food, fiber, forage, and...
Domestication is the process by which plants or animals evolved to fit a human-managed environment, ...
The origins of agriculture involved pathways of domestication in which human behaviours and plant ge...
Abstract: The first domestications of plants and animals, which occurred between 10 K years and 5 K ...
AbstractDomestication is one of the most fundamental changes in the evolution of human societies. Th...
Until recently, domestication has been interpreted as a rapid process with little predomestication c...
AbstractThe colonization of the human environment by plants, and the consequent evolution of domesti...
Domestication, or the evolutionary adaptation of organisms to anthropogenic ecosystems, is a key are...
We synthesise the results of a large programme of plant ecological research to investigate the selec...
It is difficult to overstate the cultural and biological impacts that the domestication of plants an...