The Canary Islands are an archipelago that lies about 100 km west of North Africa. Barley (Hordeum vulgare) has been continuously cultivated since the colonization of the islands. To investigate the agricultural history of the islands, the DNA from multiple individuals of six extant landraces of barley was sequenced, and the resulting data were analyzed with ABC modeling. Estimates of separation times of barley populations on the different islands and the mainland were congruent with archaeological dating of the earliest settlements on the islands. The results of the genetic analyses were consistent with the continuous cultivation of barley on Lanzarote island since it was first colonized, but suggested cultivation was carried out at a smal...
Barley has been continuously cultivated in the Canary archipelago for millennia, and to this day lan...
Barley has been continuously cultivated in the Canary archipelago for millennia, and to this day lan...
BACKGROUND: Understanding the evolution of cultivated barley is important for two reasons. First, th...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
Barley has been continuously cultivated in the Canary archipelago for millennia, and to this day lan...
Barley has been continuously cultivated in the Canary archipelago for millennia, and to this day lan...
Barley has been continuously cultivated in the Canary archipelago for millennia, and to this day lan...
Barley has been continuously cultivated in the Canary archipelago for millennia, and to this day lan...
BACKGROUND: Understanding the evolution of cultivated barley is important for two reasons. First, th...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
The Canary Islands were settled in the first millennium AD by colonizers likely originating from Nor...
Barley has been continuously cultivated in the Canary archipelago for millennia, and to this day lan...
Barley has been continuously cultivated in the Canary archipelago for millennia, and to this day lan...
Barley has been continuously cultivated in the Canary archipelago for millennia, and to this day lan...
Barley has been continuously cultivated in the Canary archipelago for millennia, and to this day lan...
BACKGROUND: Understanding the evolution of cultivated barley is important for two reasons. First, th...