Threshing efficiency as an incentive for rapid domestication of emmer wheat |
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Authors: | Raanan Tzarfati Yehoshua Saranga Vered Barak Avi Gopher Abraham B. Korol Shahal Abbo |
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Affiliation: | 1.Department of Evolutionary and Environmental Biology, The Institute of Evolution, Faculty of Natural Sciences, University of Haifa, Haifa 31905, Israel;2.The Robert H. Smith Institute of Plant Sciences and Genetics in Agriculture, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot 76100, Israel;3.Sonia and Marco Nadler Institute of Archaeology, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv 69978, Israel |
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Abstract: | Background and AimsThe harvesting method of wild and cultivated cereals has long been recognized as an important factor in the emergence of domesticated non-shattering ear genotypes. This study aimed to quantify the effects of spike brittleness and threshability on threshing time and efficiency in emmer wheat, and to evaluate the implications of post-harvest processes on domestication of cereals in the Near East.MethodsA diverse collection of tetraploid wheat genotypes, consisting of Triticum turgidum ssp. dicoccoides – the wild progenitor of domesticated wheat – traditional landraces, modern cultivars (T. turgidum ssp. durum) and 150 recombinant (wild × modern) inbred lines, was used in replicated controlled threshing experiments to quantify the effects of spike brittleness and threshability on threshing time and efficiency.Key ResultsThe transition from a brittle hulled wild phenotype to non-brittle hulled phenotype (landraces) was associated with an approx. 30 % reduction in threshing time, whereas the transition from the latter to non-brittle free-threshing cultivars was associated with an approx. 85 % reduction in threshing time. Similar trends were obtained with groups of recombinant inbred lines showing extreme phenotypes of brittleness and threshability.ConclusionsIn tetraploid wheat, both non-brittle spike and free-threshing are labour-saving traits that increase the efficiency of post-harvest processing, which could have been an incentive for rapid domestication of the Near Eastern cereals, thus refuting the recently proposed hypothesis regarding extra labour associated with the domesticated phenotype (non-brittle spike) and its presumed role in extending the domestication episode time frame. |
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Keywords: | Triticum turgidum ssp. dicoccoides T. turgidum ssp. durum emmer wheat conscious selection labour trap post-harvest processing protracted domestication spike brittleness (br) threshability |
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