On the origin of cultivated rye |
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Authors: | H. A. SENCER J. G. HAWKES |
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Affiliation: | Aegean Regional Agricultural Research Institute, Menemen, Izmir, Turkey;Department of Plant Biology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT, U.K. |
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Abstract: | The origin of cultivated rye has been studied, taking into consideration evidence from various fields. Based on morphological resemblances and cytogenetic affinities, cultivated rye is included in Secale cereale L. emend. Sencer, which also includes annual wild and weedy ryes. Wild populations of 5. cereale , which have evolved from Secale montanum Guss. emend. Sencer, invaded wheat and barley fields during the early days of cultivation and gave rise to weedy ryes with varying degrees of rachis brittleness. Cultivated rye was selected from weedy ryes for non-brittle rachis and bigger caryopsis both unconsciously and consciously by man. The geographic origin of cultivated rye is postulated for the Büyük Ari Dai (Mt. Ararat) and Lake Van area in eastern Turkey. It spread from this area as a weed in wheat and barley fields towards the north, east and west and imposed itself as a secondary crop under conditions unfavourable for wheat and barley. It thus became a crop in its own right in several places independently, in addition to it being known by the people living in the Caucasus and Transcaucasus from very early agricultural times. |
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Keywords: | rye secale origin evolution taxonomy ecology cytology chemotax- onomy palaeoethnobotany philology |
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