Cereal progenitors differ in stand harvest characteristics from related wild grasses

<p style="text-align:justify;">The domestication of crops in the Fertile Crescent began approximately 10,000 years ago indicating a change from a hunter‐gatherer lifestyle to a sedentary, agriculture‐based existence. The exploitation of wild plants changed during this transition, suc...

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Main Authors: Preece, C, Clamp, N, Warham, G, Charles, M, Rees, M, Jones, G, Osborne, C
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2017
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author Preece, C
Clamp, N
Warham, G
Charles, M
Rees, M
Jones, G
Osborne, C
author_facet Preece, C
Clamp, N
Warham, G
Charles, M
Rees, M
Jones, G
Osborne, C
author_sort Preece, C
collection OXFORD
description <p style="text-align:justify;">The domestication of crops in the Fertile Crescent began approximately 10,000 years ago indicating a change from a hunter‐gatherer lifestyle to a sedentary, agriculture‐based existence. The exploitation of wild plants changed during this transition, such that a small number of crops were domesticated from the broader range of species gathered from the wild. However, the reasons for this change are unclear.<br/> Previous studies have shown unexpectedly that crop progenitors are not consistently higher yielding than related wild grass species, when growing without competition. In this study, we replicate more closely natural competition within wild stands, using two greenhouse experiments to investigate whether cereal progenitors exhibit a greater seed yield per unit area than related wild species that were not domesticated.<br/> Stands of cereal progenitors do not provide a greater total seed yield per unit ground area than related wild species, but these crop progenitors do have greater reproductive efficiency than closely related wild species, with nearly twice the harvest index (the ratio of harvested seeds to total shoot dry mass).<br/> These differences arise because the progenitors have greater seed yield per tiller than closely related wild species, due to larger individual seed size but no reduction in seed number per tiller. The harvest characteristics of cereal progenitors may have made them a more attractive prospect than closely related wild species for the early cultivators who first planted these species, or could suggest an ecological filtering mechanism.<br/> Synthesis. Overall, we show that the maintenance of a high harvest index under competition, the packaging of seed in large tillers, and large seeds, consistently distinguish crop progenitors from closely related wild grass species. However, the archaeological significance of these findings remains unclear, since a number of more distantly related species, including wild oats, have an equally high or higher harvest index and yield than some of the progenitor species. Domestication of the earliest cereal crops from the pool of wild species available cannot therefore be explained solely by species differences in yield and harvest characteristics, and must also consider other plant traits. </p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:e7f02496-4663-4d91-b861-9860a80e26092022-03-27T10:42:53ZCereal progenitors differ in stand harvest characteristics from related wild grassesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:e7f02496-4663-4d91-b861-9860a80e2609EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordWiley2017Preece, CClamp, NWarham, GCharles, MRees, MJones, GOsborne, C<p style="text-align:justify;">The domestication of crops in the Fertile Crescent began approximately 10,000 years ago indicating a change from a hunter‐gatherer lifestyle to a sedentary, agriculture‐based existence. The exploitation of wild plants changed during this transition, such that a small number of crops were domesticated from the broader range of species gathered from the wild. However, the reasons for this change are unclear.<br/> Previous studies have shown unexpectedly that crop progenitors are not consistently higher yielding than related wild grass species, when growing without competition. In this study, we replicate more closely natural competition within wild stands, using two greenhouse experiments to investigate whether cereal progenitors exhibit a greater seed yield per unit area than related wild species that were not domesticated.<br/> Stands of cereal progenitors do not provide a greater total seed yield per unit ground area than related wild species, but these crop progenitors do have greater reproductive efficiency than closely related wild species, with nearly twice the harvest index (the ratio of harvested seeds to total shoot dry mass).<br/> These differences arise because the progenitors have greater seed yield per tiller than closely related wild species, due to larger individual seed size but no reduction in seed number per tiller. The harvest characteristics of cereal progenitors may have made them a more attractive prospect than closely related wild species for the early cultivators who first planted these species, or could suggest an ecological filtering mechanism.<br/> Synthesis. Overall, we show that the maintenance of a high harvest index under competition, the packaging of seed in large tillers, and large seeds, consistently distinguish crop progenitors from closely related wild grass species. However, the archaeological significance of these findings remains unclear, since a number of more distantly related species, including wild oats, have an equally high or higher harvest index and yield than some of the progenitor species. Domestication of the earliest cereal crops from the pool of wild species available cannot therefore be explained solely by species differences in yield and harvest characteristics, and must also consider other plant traits. </p>
spellingShingle Preece, C
Clamp, N
Warham, G
Charles, M
Rees, M
Jones, G
Osborne, C
Cereal progenitors differ in stand harvest characteristics from related wild grasses
title Cereal progenitors differ in stand harvest characteristics from related wild grasses
title_full Cereal progenitors differ in stand harvest characteristics from related wild grasses
title_fullStr Cereal progenitors differ in stand harvest characteristics from related wild grasses
title_full_unstemmed Cereal progenitors differ in stand harvest characteristics from related wild grasses
title_short Cereal progenitors differ in stand harvest characteristics from related wild grasses
title_sort cereal progenitors differ in stand harvest characteristics from related wild grasses
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