Multiple post‐domestication origins of kabuli chickpea through allelic variation in a diversification‐associated transcription factor

Varma Penmetsa, R. ; Carrasquilla‐Garcia, Noelia ; Bergmann, Emily M. ; Vance, Lisa ; Castro, Brenna ; Kassa, Mulualem T. ; Sarma, Birinchi K. ; Datta, Subhojit ; Farmer, Andrew D. ; Baek, Jong‐Min ; Coyne, Clarice J. ; Varshney, Rajeev K. ; Wettberg, Eric J. B. ; Cook, Douglas R. (2016) Multiple post‐domestication origins of kabuli chickpea through allelic variation in a diversification‐associated transcription factor New Phytologist, 211 (4). pp. 1440-1451. ISSN 0028-646X

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1111/nph.14010

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.14010

Abstract

Crop domestication and subsequent diversification represent adaptations to human-built environments and offer insights into the evolutionary forces that shape phenotypic diversity. Chickpea (Cicer arietinum), a widely cultivated food legume, was domesticated in the Fertile Crescent together with several other so-called founder crops (Zohary et al., 2012). This is evidenced by the Neolithic archeological record (Tanno & Wilcox, 2006) and the prevalence of crop wild relatives in the eastern Mediterranean, particularly Cicer reticulatum, the wild annual Cicer species from which the cultigen is derived.

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Deposited On:15 Dec 2021 09:54
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