“…This is an important issue as it affects garlic cultivation and horticulture, particularly in the selection of desirable and economically valuable traits. It has been suggested, on the one hand, that the wild long-pointed onion A. longicupis is ancestral to A. sativum, the cultivated garlic (Shemesh-Mayer and Kamenetsky Goldstein, 2018;POWO, 2020;Vvedensky, 1935;Etoh and Ogura, 1984;Pooler and Simon, 1993;Mathew, 1996), while, on the other hand, it is possible that A. longicupis is a wild form of cultivated garlic (Vavilov, 1966;Hong, 1999;Fritsch and Friesen, 2002;Etoh and Simon, 2002). The use of molecular genetic techniques offers a solution to this question.…”