Data from: Ecology and genomics of an important crop wild relative as a prelude to agricultural innovation
Domesticated species are impacted in unintended ways during domestication and breeding. Changes in the nature and intensity of selection impart genetic drift, reduce diversity, and increase the frequency of deleterious alleles. Such outcomes constrain our ability to expand the cultivation of crops i...
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Format: | Dataset |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Domesticated species are impacted in unintended ways during domestication
and breeding. Changes in the nature and intensity of selection impart
genetic drift, reduce diversity, and increase the frequency of deleterious
alleles. Such outcomes constrain our ability to expand the cultivation of
crops into environments that differ from those under which domestication
occurred. We address this need in chickpea, an important pulse legume, by
harnessing the diversity of wild crop relatives. We document an extreme
domestication-related genetic bottleneck and decipher the genetic history
of wild populations. We provide evidence of ancestral adaptations for seed
coat color crypsis, estimate the impact of environment on genetic
structure and trait values, and demonstrate variation between wild and
cultivated accessions for agronomic properties. A resource of genotyped,
association mapping progeny functionally links the wild and cultivated
gene pools and is an essential resource chickpea for improvement, while
our methods inform collection of other wild crop progenitor species. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.74699 |