AbstractDomestication is one of the most fundamental changes in the evolution of human societies. The geographical origins of domesticated plants are inferred from archaeology, ecology and genetic data. Scenarios vary among species and include single, diffuse or multiple independent domestications. Cultivated plants present a panel of traits, the “domestication syndrome” that distinguish them from their wild relatives. It encompasses yield-, food usage-, and cultivation-related traits. Most genes underlying those traits are “masterminds” affecting the regulation of gene networks. Phenotypic convergence of domestication traits across species or within species between independently domesticated forms rarely coincides with convergence at the g...
International audienceThe domestication of plant species lead to repeatable morphological evolution,...
International audienceContents Summary 273 Introduction 274 A brief history of domestication in gras...
International audienceThe domestication of plant species lead to repeatable morphological evolution,...
AbstractDomestication is one of the most fundamental changes in the evolution of human societies. Th...
Humans have domesticated hundreds of plant and animal species as sources of food, fiber, forage, and...
Humans have domesticated hundreds of plant and animal species as sources of food, fiber, forage, and...
Background Plant domestication occurred independently in four different regions of the Americas. In ...
Background Plant domestication occurred independently in four different regions of the Americas. In ...
Background Plant domestication occurred independently in four different regions of the Americas. In ...
Domestication is the process of evolutionary change that results in the phenotypic and genetic diffe...
Until recently, domestication has been interpreted as a rapid process with little predomestication c...
Domestication is the process of evolutionary change that results in the phenotypic and genetic diffe...
Domestication is the process through which a wild plant becomes a crop. The process is the result of...
Domesticated species differ from their wild ancestors and relatives for a set of traits that is know...
Domesticated species differ from their wild ancestors and relatives for a set of traits that is know...
International audienceThe domestication of plant species lead to repeatable morphological evolution,...
International audienceContents Summary 273 Introduction 274 A brief history of domestication in gras...
International audienceThe domestication of plant species lead to repeatable morphological evolution,...
AbstractDomestication is one of the most fundamental changes in the evolution of human societies. Th...
Humans have domesticated hundreds of plant and animal species as sources of food, fiber, forage, and...
Humans have domesticated hundreds of plant and animal species as sources of food, fiber, forage, and...
Background Plant domestication occurred independently in four different regions of the Americas. In ...
Background Plant domestication occurred independently in four different regions of the Americas. In ...
Background Plant domestication occurred independently in four different regions of the Americas. In ...
Domestication is the process of evolutionary change that results in the phenotypic and genetic diffe...
Until recently, domestication has been interpreted as a rapid process with little predomestication c...
Domestication is the process of evolutionary change that results in the phenotypic and genetic diffe...
Domestication is the process through which a wild plant becomes a crop. The process is the result of...
Domesticated species differ from their wild ancestors and relatives for a set of traits that is know...
Domesticated species differ from their wild ancestors and relatives for a set of traits that is know...
International audienceThe domestication of plant species lead to repeatable morphological evolution,...
International audienceContents Summary 273 Introduction 274 A brief history of domestication in gras...
International audienceThe domestication of plant species lead to repeatable morphological evolution,...