Surprisingly Low Limits of Selection in Plant Domestication.

Evol Bioinform Online

Institute of Archaeology, University College London, London, UK.

Published: April 2016

Current debate concerns the pace at which domesticated plants emerged from cultivated wild populations and how many genes were involved. Using an individual-based model, based on the assumptions of Haldane and Maynard Smith, respectively, we estimate that a surprisingly low number of 50-100 loci are the most that could be under selection in a cultivation regime at the selection strengths observed in the archaeological record. This finding is robust to attempts to rescue populations from extinction through selection from high standing genetic variation, gene flow, and the Maynard Smith-based model of threshold selection. Selective sweeps come at a cost, reducing the capacity of plants to adapt to new environments, which may contribute to the explanation of why selective sweeps have not been detected more frequently and why expansion of the agrarian package during the Neolithic was so frequently associated with collapse.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4822723PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4137/EBO.S33495DOI Listing

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