Plant behaviour from human imprints and the cultivation of wild cereals in Holocene Sahara

The human selection of food plants cannot always have been aimed exclusively at isolating the traits typical of domesticated species today. Each phase of global change must have obliged plants and humans to cope with and develop innovative adaptive strategies. Hundreds of thousands of wild cereal se...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature plants 2018-02, Vol.4 (2), p.71-81
Hauptverfasser: Mercuri, Anna Maria, Fornaciari, Rita, Gallinaro, Marina, Vanin, Stefano, di Lernia, Savino
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The human selection of food plants cannot always have been aimed exclusively at isolating the traits typical of domesticated species today. Each phase of global change must have obliged plants and humans to cope with and develop innovative adaptive strategies. Hundreds of thousands of wild cereal seeds from the Holocene ‘green Sahara’ tell a story of cultural trajectories and environmental instability revealing that a complex suite of weediness traits were preferred by both hunter-gatherers and pastoralists. The archaeobotanical record of the Takarkori rockshelter in southwest Libya covering four millennia of human occupation in the central Sahara gives us a unique insight into long-term plant manipulation and cultivation without domestication. The success of a number of millets was rooted in their invasive-opportunistic behaviour, rewarded during their coexistence with people in Africa. These wild plants were selected for features that were precious in the past but pernicious for agriculture today. Reconnecting past practices with modern farming strategies can help us to seek out the best resources for the future. Examination of wild cereal seed concentration at sites in Saharan Africa, and whether their traits of ‘weediness’ led to use and cultivation by humans from the eighth millennium bc .
ISSN:2055-0278
2055-0278
DOI:10.1038/s41477-017-0098-1