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Opinion Plant domestication versus crop evolution: a conceptual framework for cereals and grain legumes Shahal Abbo1*, Ruth Pinhasi van-Oss1, Avi Gopher2, Yehoshua Saranga1, Itai Ofner1, and Zvi Peleg1 1 Robert H. Smith Institute of Plant Sciences and Genetics in Agriculture, The Levi Eshkol School of Agriculture, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot 7610001, Israel 2 Sonia and Marco Nadler Institute of Archaeology, Tel-Aviv University, Ramat Aviv 6997801, Israel ‘Domestication syndrome’ (DS) denotes differences between domesticated plants and their wild progenitors. Crop plants are dynamic entities; hence, not all parameters distinguishing wild progenitors from cultigens resulted from domestication. In this opinion article, we refine the DS concept using agronomic, genetic, and archaeobotanical considerations by distinguishing crucial domestication traits from traits that probably evolved post-domestication in Near Eastern grain crops. We propose that only traits showing a clear domesticated–wild dimorphism represent the pristine domestication episode, whereas traits showing a phenotypic continuum between wild and domesticated gene pools mostly reflect post-domestication diversification. We propose that our approach may apply to other crop types and examine its implications for discussing the timeframe of plant domestication and for modern plant science and breeding. Plant domestication Domesticated plants differ from their wild progenitors in several morphophysiological traits, most of which are associated with seed retention and germination, growth habit, size, coloration, and/or edibility of economically important organs [1–3]. Comparative analyses drew attention to the similarity between the ‘domestication traits’ (see Glossary) of both closely and more distantly related crops [4,5], which underlay the ‘domestication syndrome’ (DS) concept [6], a collective term describing the overall differences between cultigens and their wild progenitors. Crop plants are dynamic genetic entities [2,7,8]; therefore, not all morphological, physiological, and biochemical Corresponding author: Abbo, S. ([email protected]). Keywords: crucial domestication traits; crop evolution traits; domestication episode; domestication syndrome traits; episodic versus protracted domestication. * S. Abbo is the incumbent of the Jacob and Rachel Liss Chair in Field Crops and Plant Genetics. 1360-1385/$ – see front matter ß 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tplants.2013.12.002 Glossary Caryopses: plural of caryopsis, the dry monocarpellate fruit typical of many Gramineae, species (e.g., wheat, barley, rice) in which the pericarp is adhered to the seed coat, commonly referred to as grain or kernel. Crucial domestication trait: a trait without which the adoption of a species for domestication would be impossible. Often, a trait that was imperative for the profitable cultivation of this species (e.g., free germination in the Near Eastern grain legumes). For the archaeobotanist, a crucial trait would be any morphological (at the macro or micro level) or biochemical trait, or indeed any trait, that enables a clear unequivocal classification of plant remains as having either wild or domesticated origin. Domestication traits: common use of this term refers to any morphological, biochemical, developmental, or physiological traits showing a different phenotype between domesticated plants and their immediate wild progenitors [4,6,14,19]. Although some of these traits were associated with the domestication episode, many such traits have accumulated during millennia of crop evolution under domestication. Hence, we propose a distinction between crucial domestication and crop evolution/diversification traits. Free germination: a physiological or physical condition of mature seeds that enables germination upon water imbibition. This phenotype is associated with domesticated forms but also in prevalent weed species. Improvement (crop evolution, diversification) trait: any plant trait that was not imperative for domestication and did not limit the adoption and management of the respective species by humans. Such traits may have evolved at any time after the ancient domestication episode (Box 1); therefore, these traits are the result of crop evolutionary processes under (post-) domestication. These traits were selected by farmers in antiquity; a process that gave rise to the immense variation observed among traditional landraces in many world regions, whereas in modern times crop improvement is mostly carried out by breeders. Crop improvement traits may include (but are not limited to) features associated with growth habit, higher (or more stable) yields, pest and disease resistance, grain quality, and adaptation to new growing environments. Intact seeds: herein, seeds as harvested from the mother plant without any physical or chemical damage to their seed coat. Rachis: the inflorescence (spike) axis. The wheat and barley spikes are carried at a terminal position on the stem, hence the rachis is formed by a series of short nodes, with sessile spikelets (carrying the florets and grains) carried alternately at each internode. Scarified seeds: herein, mature seeds whose seed coat was injured to enable water uptake by the seed and further germination. Shattering: herein, the propagule dispersal mechanism of wild plants, for example, via spike disarticulation into individual spikelets resulting from the development of an abscission zone at the spike internodes, or via single seed shattering as a result of pod dehiscence in legumes. Sympatric: sympatric distribution of two or more plants refers to geographical overlap in the range of their distribution, co-existence in the same region. Teleological: as defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary, this term may refer to (i) a doctrine that ends are immanent in nature and (ii) a doctrine explaining phenomena by final causes. According to the Oxford dictionary, the explanation of phenomena is by the purpose they serve rather than by postulated causes. Vernalization: usually defined as the hastening of flowering following exposure to temperatures much cooler than those optimal for vegetative growth (e.g., [67]). Trends in Plant Science, June 2014, Vol. 19, No. 6 351 Opinion differences between extant crops and their wild progenitors can be attributed to ancient domestication episodes [2,9]. Indeed, it is widely accepted that there is a differentiation between genetic changes associated with domestication and those resulting from later crop diversification and under domestication [9–16]. By definition, the distinction between domesticationand improvement-related genetic changes relies on a conceptual distinction between ‘plant domestication’ and ‘crop evolution’ [9,15] (Box 1). If a suite of traits can be identified as having been crucial for the domestication of certain crops, it follows that other features differentiating between extant domesticated germplasm and the respective wild gene pools are likely to have evolved after domestication. In this context, an appropriate method for defining crucial domestication traits may improve our understanding of plant domestication and crop evolution [10,12]. In this opinion article, we propose a conceptual and practical Box 1. Domestication episodes and crop evolution processes Conceptual framework There should be a distinction between historical ‘events’ (i.e., short episodes) and long-term historical processes [106] when discussing plant domestication [9]. In our view, the domestication episode took place in a short time window that separated two long-term historical processes – the preceding build-up of the perceptual and technological background and the later crop evolution under domestication processes [9]. The choice of species, recognizing the advantage of domesticated genotypes, and the selection of these genotypes by Neolithic communities were elements of the domestication episode. Once domesticated, each crop plant underwent a distinct evolutionary trajectory. Crop evolutionary processes may include (but are not limited to) the following: emergence of new morphologies (e.g., changes in grain size and shape, free threshing, increase in floral fertility, growth habit), accumulation of allelic variation controlling adaptive mechanisms (e.g., day-length insensitivity, vernalization insensitivity), and quality traits (e.g., scent, change in protein or oil concentrations). Definitions Episode As defined by the Cambridge, Merriam-Webster, and Oxford dictionaries, we use the word ‘episode’ to denote: a single event; an event that is distinctive; an incident or period considered in isolation. Domestication In biological terms, domestication refers to the major genetically based phenotypes characterizing plants selected by humans (e.g., non-brittle rachis and free germination). In cultural terms, domestication is an episode based on a decision and follow-up action by which humans have chosen certain species and selected particular stocks for growing. Thus, domestication involves obtaining desirable plants with distinct phenotypes by taking educated and conscious decisions. Cultivation Cultivation is a chain of husbandry operations defining the ‘agronomic’ arena and, thus, human intervention in the life of wild or domesticated plants. This may include (but is not limited to) threshing, cleaning, sorting, selecting and stocking seeds, soil preparation, sowing, tending, and harvesting. The manipulation of plants by Neolithic communities involved a new perception of land and plants, and a change in the relation between culture and nature (e.g., [9,107,108]). In this framework, cultivation is not a prelude (nor a prerequisite) to ‘true’ (morphological) domestication [4,28,95,97,100,109,110]. 352 Trends in Plant Science June 2014, Vol. 19, No. 6 framework for identifying genuine domestication traits and distinguishing them from traits that evolved after domestication based on published data obtained from studies of Near Eastern wheat, barley, pea, lentil, and chickpea and their wild progenitors. Theoretical considerations Although the biological distinction between domestication traits and improvement traits is widely accepted, there are no clear criteria for such a classification [3,14,16–20]. To remedy this situation we propose the concept of ‘crucial domestication traits’, herein defined as traits imperative for domesticating a plant and necessary for its cultivation. Classical examples of such traits are free germination (loss of seed dormancy) in the Near Eastern grain legumes [21– 23] and loss of bitterness (e.g., Cucurbitaceae, almond) [24– 27]. Although the concept of crucial domestication traits is unlikely to prove universal or solve all the problems associated with plant domestication studies, it should greatly assist in resolving some confusion and debate, for example, regarding the domestication timeframe [9,28–31]. The most diagnostic DS traits of grain crops are monoor di-genic and often the domesticated phenotype is conditioned by recessive alleles [2,27,32,33]; therefore, genuine DS traits are expected to be monomorphic among populations of the wild progenitor and within crop germplasm, albeit with the alternative (allele and) phenotype in each of the respective gene pools. This is because such traits are assumed to have been targeted during the selection for domestication. Traits that are polymorphic in the wild but monomorphic (or with lower allelic diversity) in the domesticated gene pool were probably also selected during the domestication episode, and are likely to show evidence of genetic bottlenecks [13,34–36]. Traits that are monomorphic in the wild but polymorphic in the domesticated gene pool are likely to have evolved under domestication, such as chickpea seed shape (Figure 1) [37]. Traits with equivalent polymorphism levels in the wild and in the domesticated gene pools are unlikely to have had a major role in genetic changes associated with domestication [36]. If indeed selection during the domestication episode did not target such traits, a wide array of alleles and, hence, phenotypes, would have entered the populations managed by the Neolithic ‘cultivators’ as opposed to the purifying selection in favor of free germinating legumes [21,23]. To test our hypothesis, we have selected several Near Eastern grain crops as test cases to analyze the pattern of genetic variation of several morphophysiological traits often mentioned as part of the DS [4,6]. Crop plant test cases Emmer wheat Shattering. Spikes of wild emmer (Triticum turgidum ssp. dicoccoides) disarticulate upon ripening, whereas domesticated emmer (T. turgidum ssp. dicoccum, T. turgidum ssp. durum) have non-brittle rachis and spikes that remain intact upon ripening [38] (Figure 1). Quantitative treatment of spike brittleness in a diverse emmer collection (wild and domesticated) has confirmed that there is no phenotypic continuum of spike brittleness between wild and domesticated genotypes [39]. Opinion Trends in Plant Science June 2014, Vol. 19, No. 6 (A) (B) (C) Wild cicer (D) Wild emmer (E) 60 16 50 12 40 20 4 10 Domescated wheat Domescated chickpea 75 150 225 300 375 450 525 5 5 4 4 3 3 2 2 1 1 600 Seed weight, mg 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 Number of genotypes 30 8 60 Grain weight, mg (F) TRENDS in Plant Science Figure 1. Traits related to seed dispersal and size. (A) Mature pods of wild pea (Pisum elatius) in its natural habitat. (B) Left, non-brittle spike of domesticated barley (Hordeum vulgare); right, mature brittle rachis spike of wild barley (Hordeum spontaneum). (C) Mature disarticulating spike of wild emmer wheat (Triticum turgidum ssp. dicoccoides). (D) Frequency distribution of seed weight among 35 wild Cicer genotypes and 25 domesticated chickpea cultivars. (E) Frequency distribution of grain weight among 128 wild emmer accessions and 17 domesticated wheat cultivars. (F) Example of the phenotypic continuum of seed size in wild Cicer reticulatum (top) and domesticated chickpea (bottom). Post-harvest treatment. Glume toughness (ease of threshing), expressed as the spike harvest index [grain fraction divided by the total spike weight (chaff + grain)] shows a range among wild emmer accessions as well as among traditional landraces (hulled and free threshing), albeit without overlap between the wild and hulled domesticated groups [39]. Germination. As observed in our routine laboratory work, mature grains of domesticated emmer (traditional and modern cultivars) germinate readily upon imbibition normally attaining 95% germination. In nature, wild emmer generally shows 50% germination (Figure 2) because only one of the two seeds of its dispersal unit germinates during the first rainy season following maturation [40]. We are unaware of a widescale comparative study of germination in wild and domesticated emmer. Grain size. On average, wild emmer grains are smaller than domesticated emmer (Figure 1). However, there is considerable overlap in grain weight values between wild and domesticated emmer, making it impossible to classify 353 Opinion Trends in Plant Science June 2014, Vol. 19, No. 6 Wild pisum Domescated pea Wild Domescated Barley Scarified seeds Wild cicer Domescated chickpea (D) Domescated wheat Wild emmer wheat Vernalizaon Control (C) (B) Wheat Intact seeds (A) TRENDS in Plant Science Figure 2. Traits associated with germination and phenology. (A) Germination test of intact (control) and scarified seeds of wild Pisum humile and domesticated pea. (B) Germination tests of wild versus domesticated wheat and barley. (C) Developmental vernalization response of wild Cicer and domesticated chickpea. (D) Erect and low tillering growth habit of domesticated wheat (Triticum turgidum ssp. durum) versus prostrate and profuse tillering of wild emmer (Triticum turgidum ssp. dicoccoides). grains that fall within the size-overlap range as wild or domesticated (Figure 4 in [41]). Indeed, the now extinct, domesticated emmer taxon Triticum parvicoccum had smaller seeds than wild emmer [42,43], suggesting that grain size evolution under domestication was not unidirectional. Vernalization. Both winter (requiring vernalization for timely flowering) and spring types (vernalization insensitive), as well as intermediate genotypes, were identified among wild emmer [44] and among domesticated emmer cultivars [45,46]. Barley Shattering. Spikes of wild barley (Hordeum spontaneum) disarticulate upon ripening, whereas domesticated barley (Hordeum vulgare) has a non-brittle rachis and its ripe spikes remain intact [38] (Figure 1). Germination. Seeds of domesticated barley germinate readily upon imbibition. Fresh dispersal units of wild barley usually germinate poorly, whereas naked caryopses germinate more uniformly [47]. Grain size. A continuum of wild–domesticated grain weight values exists in barley. Mean grain weight values of 0.036 g among wild barley from diverse habitats were reported, with a range of 0.02 to 0.05 g [48,49]. Domesticated two-row barley genotypes with mean grain weight values above 0.05 g are known [50]; however, mean grain weight values below 0.036 g were documented among domesticated two-row barley [51–53]. 354 Vernalization. Parallel genetic diversity of vernalization requirements was identified among wild, traditional, and modern domesticated barley (e.g., [54]). Pea Shattering. Wild peas show full pod shattering upon maturity, whereas domesticated pea cultivars have indehiscent pods, including modern as well as traditional landraces (e.g., Pisum abyssinicum, which is endemic to the Ethiopian highlands). Germination. Wild peas show a strong seed dormancy phenotype mediated by water-impermeable seed coats [23,55,56], whereas domesticated peas germinate readily upon wetting. Although P. abyssinicum landraces have staggered uneven germination, this phenotype does not hinder profitable cultivation, as evident from its status as a major crop in Ethiopia. Seed size. We are unaware of a report on widescale screening of seed sizes of domesticated versus wild pea genotypes. Wild Pisum accessions in our working collection have seed weights of 0.09 to 0.11 g. A range of 0.12 to 0.30 g per seed was measured in a random sample of eight domesticated field pea cultivars grown in Israel that were obtained from the United States Department of Agriculture germplasm collection. Vernalization. Both winter (vernalization responsive) and spring (vernalization insensitive) domesticated pea cultivars are known [57]. We are unaware of any studies of the vernalization requirements of wild pea germplasm. In our Opinion collection, some genotypes obtained from eastern Turkey or Mount Hermon (Israel) have a strong vernalization response, whereas wild peas from habitats with mild winters (e.g., near the Sea of Galilee, Israel) flower early in the season without vernalization. Lentil Shattering. Wild lentils (Lens spp.) show a strong pod shattering phenotype upon maturity [58], whereas domesticated lentils have incompletely indehiscent pods [59]. This partial dehiscence of domesticated lentil pods necessitates harvest by pulling before the crop is completely dry in traditional agriculture [2,22], whereas modern lentil cultivars requires chemical desiccation prior to mechanical harvest to minimize grain losses (http://www.agric. wa.gov.au/objtwr/imported_assets/content/fcp/lp/lent/cp/ f09999.pdf). Germination. Wild lentils show a strong seed dormancy phenotype mediated by water-impermeable seed coats. After wild seed dispersal, only 10% of seeds germinate during the new growth season (October–November). By contrast, domesticated lentil cultivars germinate readily upon imbibition [22,38,60,61]. Seed size. Domesticated lentil cultivars are grouped into two categories: ‘microsperma’ (small seeded) and ‘macrosperma’ (large seeded). However, a continuum of seed weights ranging from 0.01 to 0.08 g across the two cultivar groups has been reported [62–64]. Wild lentils have a range of seed sizes that are mostly smaller than those of microsperma cultivars. Nevertheless, a seed weight of 0.016 g is not uncommon in wild Lens orientalis [65]. Vernalization. We are unaware of a comparative study of the vernalization response shown by wild and domesticated lentils. The latitudinal range of wild L. orientalis (from Israel to Tajikistan) and the yet wider range of domesticated lentils from Ethiopia across the Mediterranean, Asia Minor, Central Asia, and northwards to Scandinavia suggests that there may be naturally occurring variation in phenology genes other than day-length sensitivity (vernalization included) in wild and domesticated lentils. Chickpea Shattering. Domesticated chickpea have indehiscent pods; however, a certain degree of pod shattering may occur under hot and dry weather conditions. In wild chickpea (Cicer reticulatum), a considerable proportion of the mature pods remain intact, which led to the species being described as preadapted to domestication [64]. Germination. Wild chickpeas show a strong seed dormancy phenotype because of their hard seed coats, whereas all domesticated chickpeas imbibe water upon wetting and show a free germination phenotype. Seed size. Domesticated chickpea cultivars are classified into two groups according to a suite of morphological traits, including seed size. ‘Desi’ cultivars are characterized by Trends in Plant Science June 2014, Vol. 19, No. 6 small angular seeds, whereas large ram-head or nearly rounded seeds are typical of the ‘Kabuli’ cultivar group [66]. Seed weight of C. reticulatum ranges from 0.09 to 0.20 g, overlapping the Desi group range (Figure 1). Seed shape. Seeds of the wild progenitor of chickpea are angular, whereas domesticated chickpea germplasm contain a wide range of seed shapes, that is, angular but also rounded, and ‘ram-head’ absent in the wild gene pool (Figure 1). Vernalization. Domesticated chickpea is considered vernalization insensitive [67], whereas wild C. reticulatum accessions show a considerable flowering advance (of up to 30 days) in response to vernalization [68]. The vernalization requirement is a major adaptation of the wild progenitor being native to southeastern Turkey, a region with winter temperatures that are below freezing, but a major disadvantage for chickpea under domestication because it is a traditional spring crop [35,69] (Figure 2). Domestication versus improvement traits The Near Eastern wheat, barley, pea, lentil, and chickpea crops demonstrate several morphophysiological differences between the cultigens and their wild ancestors. Nonetheless, for each crop test case there is a specific trait presenting a clear dichotomy between the wild and domesticated forms (e.g., brittle versus non-brittle rachis cereals, hard seeded versus free germinating legumes). This observation corresponds with the mono- or di-genic inheritance of most diagnostic DS traits of grain crops [2]; therefore, we propose that only traits showing a clear dichotomy between the wild and domesticated forms reliably represent the pristine domestication episode, whereas traits showing a phenotypic continuum (e.g., seed size) between wild and domesticated gene pools reflect (mostly polygenic) improvement traits that evolved under domestication [7]. Inability to identify any wild–domesticated dimorphism would not suggest that a crop plant is not ‘fully domesticated’ but rather that there was no crucial phenotypic hurdle for its adoption as a crop. The proposed conceptual distinction and apparently different genetic bases between crucial domestication traits and crop evolution traits should provide students of plant domestication, crop physiologists, and plant breeders better genetic resolution [9,13,16]. Although our approach may seem narrow in scope as applied only to Near Eastern grain crops, a thorough literature survey indicates that it may well apply to crops from other world regions, as well as to tree and vegetable crops, all with simply inherited crucial domestication traits [70]; as documented for potato glycoalkaloids [71], the bitterness traits of almond [72], melon [33], cucumber [27], watermelon [73], pumpkin, and squash [25]. Similarly, free germination is simply inherited in all four domesticated lupin species [74–78], and soybean [79]. In several domesticated Vigna species between two and six quantitative trait loci (QTLs) conditioning free germination were identified, but in all cases one or two accounted for 25–45% of the variation thereby suggesting that only a 355 Opinion single crucial domestication change was required for profitable cultivation [32,80–82]. Implications for modern plant science and breeding A study that analyzed three classes of maize (Zea sp.) germplasm (wild, landraces, modern cultivars) defined domestication genomic changes as differentiating between the wild progenitor gene pool and maize landraces [13]. Improvement changes were defined as distinguishing between landraces and modern cultivars. Based on a genome-wide scan, the domestication-related polymorphisms were shown to have different chromosomal distribution compared with improvement-related polymorphisms, and putative domestication loci showed evidence for stronger selection (apparently during the domestication episode) compared with improvement loci (post-domestication selection) [13]. A study of crop–wild introgression in maize–Zea mays ssp. mexicana [83] revealed evidence for consistent genome-wide reciprocal introgressions. However, it appears that introgression from wild mexicana into maize is restricted at DS loci (e.g., grassy tillers1, teosinte branched1), and that introgression from maize into mexicana is rare along the short arm of chromosome 4, which carries among other DS loci the teosinte glume architecture gene. Genomic regions with significantly lower introgressions were termed ‘resistant to introgression’. Introgressions of mexicana alleles associated with the adaptation of maize to the Mexican highlands (an improvement, change) were detected; however, there was little evidence for introgressions of maize alleles into mexicana in the highland adaptation loci [83]. Our interpretation of these observations is that (at least a part of) those genomic regions ‘resistant to introgression’ are the crucial maize DS loci, as evident from their role in maintaining the genetic (and adaptive) integrity of these two cross-compatible wild and domesticated sympatric entities. Identification of crucial domestication loci in the maize genome fully accords with our theoretical considerations and strongly supports the notion that DS traits have different genetic architecture relative to improvement traits [13]. A different experimental approach based on wild and domesticated genotypes has been applied to pea (Pisum sativum) and lentil (Lens culinaris). These studies propose that only the change at the seed dormancy locus can be regarded as a crucial DS trait in lentil [21,22,60] and pea [23]. This is because without free germination, cultivation of wild pea and lentil (and probably also chickpea and bitter vetch) is likely to result in net loss of seeds and labor [23]. It is probable that indehiscent pods would minimize yield losses in legumes; however, it is not imperative for profitable lentil or pea growing, as shown by experimental cultivation of wild pea with dehiscent pods after first ensuring full germination by seed scarification [23]. Based on this finding, it was suggested that apart from free germination (and changes in linked loci that may have occurred by a correlated response to selection for free germination) the allelic variation in approximately 15 genes (indehiscence included), distinguishing wild from domesticated pea [56], can be regarded as diversification traits that may have evolved any time during pea evolution after domestication [9,23]. 356 Trends in Plant Science June 2014, Vol. 19, No. 6 This distinction between ‘pristine’ domestication traits and later crop evolutionary genetic changes is highly relevant for modern plant breeding. The narrow genetic basis of crop plants relative to their wild progenitors is an almost universal phenomenon [34,84]. The ancient domestication ‘sampling errors’ were partly ‘corrected’ by many generations of introgression when and wherever populations of wild progenitors were available for cross-pollination and when such introgressed traits suited farmers’ preferences [83,85–87]. The genetic basis of many crops was further narrowed down owing to the abandonment of traditional landraces following post-World War II industrialization of many countries [88]. The recognition of those past and recent genetic erosion events led crop geneticists to use wild germplasm as a source for novel allelic variation absent in cultigens (e.g., [89]). Our distinction between domestication and improvement traits (and the respective genomic regions) may offer a new perspective to studies determining which parts of crop genomes were not subject to severe allelic erosion and which were deprived of genetic variation owing to the ancient domestication episodes. For example, a genomewide scan of wild and domesticated barley exposed a chromosomal single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) diversity pattern corresponding with the prediction of our approach [36], including parallel low SNP diversity around the btr1btr2 loci that control spike brittleness in both wild and domesticated genotypes (similar to monomorphism in both gene pools). However, no diversity reduction was associated with the vrs1 gene that conditions the six-row phenotype or with the nud (naked kernel) gene that are often mistakenly considered domestication traits (e.g., [19]). Interestingly, a strong reduction in SNP diversity was documented in chromosome 6H of the domesticated germplasm, albeit with no known DS locus in that region [36]. This may suggest that certain important but subtle traits linked to this region were altered during the domestication episode of barley and therefore merit investigation. Such ‘domestication charting’ of chromosomal regions vis-à-vis the selective sweeps associated with domestication episodes (e.g., [13]) is essential for effective modern allele ‘mining’ approaches aimed at enriching modern cultivars with agronomically important traits (e.g., [90]). Implications for archaeobotany Some of the morphological DS traits can be identified in carbonized archaeobotanical material and thereby in conjunction with 14C dating may help to determine the context and timing of the first appearance of morphologically domesticated plants. A classical example of such a trait involves the diagnostic difference between the smooth disarticulation scar of wild wheat and barley dispersal units and the rough breakage points of the non-brittle rachis of their domesticated counterparts (e.g., [38,91]). Indeed, for decades, 14C dating of archaeobotanical remains has been used to infer the age and location of the earliest domesticated cereals in the Near East [38] and other world regions (e.g., [92]). Domesticated cereals mostly have a more erect growth habit compared with their wild ancestors [4] (Figure 2D), Opinion Trends in Plant Science June 2014, Vol. 19, No. 6 Table 1. Examples of major morphological and physiological traits of Near Eastern crops Trait Archaeobotanical visibility a Polymorphism pattern Legumes Cereals Legumes Cereals Propagule retention Invisible Visible Monomorphic Monomorphic Germination Invisible Invisible Monomorphic Monomorphic Seed shape Visible Visible Polymorphic Polymorphic Seed size Visible Visible Polymorphic Polymorphic Growth habit: determinate or indeterminate, prostate or erect Phenology: day-length or vernalization response Invisible Invisible Polymorphic Polymorphic Invisible Invisible Polymorphic Polymorphic Documented wild–domesticated overlap Potential domestication marker Living plant Certain degree of shattering in lentil and chickpea No overlap Emmer wheat, barley, lentil, pea, chickpea Emmer wheat, barley, pea, lentil, chickpea Emmer wheat, barley Emmer wheat, barley, pea Refs Archaeobotanical remains Only cereals [39,111] Good, mostly legumes Good None [21,23,55] Poor, except Cicer [37,41] Poor Poor [41,48, 49,65,111] Good None [4] Poor, except Cicer None [1,3,8,26, 44,54] Good a Detectability (visibility) in the archaeobotanical record and potential for classification of living plants and archaeobotanical remains based on the wild–domesticated phenotypic overlap. but this trait is archaeologically invisible (Table 1). Likewise, the vernalization response typical of wild chickpea [35,68] and absent in domesticated chickpea [67] cannot be detected in archaeobotanical material. Archaeobotanical remains of Near Eastern legumes consist of charred seeds [93,94]; therefore, in the absence of remains of pods, pod indehiscence, often considered a key DS trait (e.g., [56,95]) is archaeologically invisible, making it impossible to date the first appearance of legumes with indehiscent pods (Table 1). The thickness and breadth of charred einkorn, emmer, and barley grains from two early Neolithic sites in northern Syria (Jerf el Ahmar, 11 400–10 700; Dja’de, 10 600– 10 200 calibrated years Before Present) have been measured and compared to domesticated specimens from late Neolithic/Chalcolithic Kosak Shamali (which is a site in the same region) dating to 7000 calibrated years Before Present [96]. The study showed that grain dimensions increased over time in some cases [96]. Grain sizes from several species retrieved from archaeological sites covering a wide chronological range were also measured [97]. Assuming that such data from different archaeological sites are representative of species-wide evolutionary patterns, evolutionary rates were calculated to describe ‘the domestication process’ of wheat and barley over a time window spanning 4000 years starting at the point in time when the authors suggest that the species were first cultivated [97]. These regression analyses based on seed size change over time were described as ‘direct evidence from archaeobotany’ in support of a protracted domestication scenario [98]. However, it was also suggested that the selfpollination breeding systems of the Near Eastern crops enabled the ancient ‘cultivators’ to quickly identify and selectively propagate recessive DS mutants under perpetual sowing and reaping regimes in their fields (e.g., [4,99,100]), which would result in relatively rapid (rather than protracted) domestication timeframes [9]. Furthermore, in our view, the archaeo-evolutionary approach described in [97] is weakened by: (i) the teleological nature of the pre-domestication cultivation concept [101,102]; (ii) the circular argument regarding archaeobotanical remains that were interpreted as ‘arable weeds’ being used as an indicator of cultivation [103] (see discussion in [9,31]); (iii) the assumption that archaeobotanical assemblages from different sites across the Near East can be considered in terms of meta-populations of the respective species [30]; and (iv) the inability to distinguish between plant domestication episodes and later-in-time crop evolutionary processes, thereby undermining the conceptual and practical resolution power while treating either prehistoric domestication episodes or crop evolution under domestication processes [9]. Similar to the emmer case (Figure 1E), and based on similarity of grain weight values between wild and domesticated barley, the authors of another study [49] concluded that domestication did not involve changes in barley grain weight. We conclude that the phenotypic continuum documented for seed weight in wheat, chickpea, and lentil (wild and domesticated, Figure 1) leads to the same conclusions as our population genetic perspective [30]. Namely, that seed size measurements of archaeobotanical material of wheat, barley, lentil, or chickpea are not reliable diagnostic parameters for describing Near Eastern plant domestication. This does not mean that the ‘first cultivators’ did not select for largeseeded wheat, barley, or lentil (they may well have done so from the outset) but rather that with the abovementioned phenotypic continuum, seed dimensions cannot be used to classify archaeobotanical material as wild or domesticated (Table 1). Another difficulty is the inability to distinguish in archaeobotanical records between genetic changes 357 Opinion affecting seed dimensions and phenotypic changes caused by agro-technological improvements (e.g., manuring). Although genome-wide scans of selective sweeps do not require any a priori assumption regarding the timing or cause of sequence changes, it would be ironic if interpretation of genomic scans with fine-grained resolution between crucial DS and improvement loci [12,13,36,83,90] would be limited due to a poor and vague conceptualization of plant domestication as a millennia-long domestication-improvement continuum [19,28,29,97,98,104,105]. Concluding remarks Experimental morphophysiological findings support the concept of crucial DS traits [23]. At the DNA level, such crucial DS loci play a major role in maintaining the genetic and adaptive integrity of sympatric crop–wild complexes [36,83]. Based on our crop test cases, we suggest that only traits showing a clear dichotomy between the wild and domesticated forms are reliable descriptors of the pristine domestication episode (i.e., are genuine DS traits). More specifically, traits with a clear phenotypic continuum between wild and domesticated gene pools cannot be used to discuss or to describe plant domestication (e.g., [96,97]); therefore, these traits cannot provide support for a protracted domestication model [28,29,97,104]. Yet, such traits appear as highly effective descriptors of crop evolution under (post-) domestication [9]. The application of our crucial DS traits concept could become a powerful tool for deciphering the genetic changes underlying the domestication episodes on crop-specific bases, thereby enabling more efficient future crop improvement. Acknowledgments We thank Professor G. Ladizinsky for many years of teaching and numerous discussions on plant domestication and crop evolution. 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