2019
DOI: 10.1101/791806
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Ancient genomes reveal early Andean farmers selected common beans while preserving diversity

Abstract: All crops are the product of a domestication process that started less than 12,000 years ago from one or more wild populations [1, 2]. Farmers selected desirable phenotypic traits, such as improved energy accumulation, palatability of seeds or reduced natural shattering [3], while leading domesticated populations through several more or less gradual demographic contractions [2, 4]. As a consequence, erosion of wild genetic variation [5] is typical of modern cultivars making them highly susceptible to pathogens… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The successful adoption of common beans by farmers in different continents with diverse climates highlights its vast genetic diversity and broad adaptation. Although early Andean farmers (2500 years ago until 600 years ago) maintained genetic diversity, modern breeding practices resulted in a great loss of genetic diversity in cultivated Andean beans [31].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The successful adoption of common beans by farmers in different continents with diverse climates highlights its vast genetic diversity and broad adaptation. Although early Andean farmers (2500 years ago until 600 years ago) maintained genetic diversity, modern breeding practices resulted in a great loss of genetic diversity in cultivated Andean beans [31].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, the domestication bottleneck concept appears to be incompatible with the observed weak selection in the archaeological record. Direct archaeogenomic examination of genetic diversity during domestication (barley, maize, wheat, sorghum, and beans [74][75][76][77][78][79][80][81][82]) consistently do not show a loss of genetic diversity associated with the domestication bottleneck. Mutation load was found to be attributable mostly to processes after the domestication bottleneck [75,81].…”
Section: The Redundancy Of a Domestication Bottleneck Conceptmentioning
confidence: 99%