Environment as a limiting factor of the historical global spread of mungbean

While the domestication process has been investigated in many crops, the detailed route of cultivation range expansion and factors governing this process received relatively little attention. Here, using mungbean ( var. ) as a test case, we investigated the genomes of more than 1000 accessions to il...

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Veröffentlicht in:eLife 2023-05, Vol.12
Hauptverfasser: Ong, Pei-Wen, Lin, Ya-Ping, Chen, Hung-Wei, Lo, Cheng-Yu, Burlyaeva, Marina, Noble, Thomas, Nair, Ramakrishnan Madhavan, Schafleitner, Roland, Vishnyakova, Margarita, Bishop-von-Wettberg, Eric, Samsonova, Maria, Nuzhdin, Sergey, Ting, Chau-Ti, Lee, Cheng-Ruei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:While the domestication process has been investigated in many crops, the detailed route of cultivation range expansion and factors governing this process received relatively little attention. Here, using mungbean ( var. ) as a test case, we investigated the genomes of more than 1000 accessions to illustrate climatic adaptation's role in dictating the unique routes of cultivation range expansion. Despite the geographical proximity between South and Central Asia, genetic evidence suggests mungbean cultivation first spread from South Asia to Southeast, East and finally reached Central Asia. Combining evidence from demographic inference, climatic niche modeling, plant morphology, and records from ancient Chinese sources, we showed that the specific route was shaped by the unique combinations of climatic constraints and farmer practices across Asia, which imposed divergent selection favoring higher yield in the south but short-season and more drought-tolerant accessions in the north. Our results suggest that mungbean did not radiate from the domestication center as expected purely under human activity, but instead, the spread of mungbean cultivation is highly constrained by climatic adaptation, echoing the idea that human commensals are more difficult to spread through the south-north axis of continents.
ISSN:2050-084X
2050-084X
DOI:10.7554/eLife.85725