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by Vincent Battesti, Muriel Gros-Balthazard, Marco Galimberti, Athanasios Kousathanas, Claire Newton, Sarah Ivorra, Laure Paradis, Yves Vigouroux, Robert Carter, Margareta Tengberg, Sylvain Santoni, Laurent Falquet, Jean-Christophe Pintaud, Jean-Frédéric Terral, Daniel Wegmann

Muriel Gros-Balthazard, Marco Galimberti, Athanasios Kousathanas, Claire Newton, Sarah Ivorra, Laure Paradis, Yves Vigouroux, Robert Carter, Margareta Tengberg, Vincent Battesti, Sylvain Santoni, Laurent Falquet, Jean-Christophe Pintaud, Jean-Frédéric Terral, Daniel Wegmann, 2017 — « The Discovery of Wild Date Palms in Oman Reveals a Complex Domestication History Involving Centers in the Middle East and Africa ». Current Biology, vol. 27 (14), p. 2211-2218.e8

ISSN: 1879-0445
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.06.045
PDF File: https://hal.science/hal-01608053
Online: https://www.cell.com/current-biolog...

 Highlights

  • We discovered wild populations of the date palm Phoenix dactylifera in remote Oman
  • Wild date palms differ from modern cultivars both morphologically and genetically
  • The domestication of date palms involved sources from the Middle East and Africa

 Summary

For many crops, wild relatives constitute an extraordinary resource for cultivar improvement and also help to better understand the history of their domestication. However, the wild ancestor species of several perennial crops have not yet been identified. Perennial crops generally present a weak domestication syndrome allowing cultivated individuals to establish feral populations difficult to distinguish from truly wild populations, and there is frequently ongoing gene flow between wild relatives and the crop that might erode most genetic differences. Here we report the discovery of populations of the wild ancestor species of the date palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.), one of the oldest and most important cultivated fruit plants in hot and arid regions of the Old World. We discovered these wild individuals in remote and isolated mountainous locations of Oman. They are genetically more diverse than and distinct from a representative sample of Middle Eastern cultivated date palms and exhibit rounded seed shapes resembling those of a close sister species and archeological samples, but not modern cultivars. Whole-genome sequencing of several wild and cultivated individuals revealed a complex domestication history involving the contribution of at least two wild sources to African cultivated date palms. The discovery of wild date palms offers a unique chance to further elucidate the history of this iconic crop that has constituted the cornerstone of traditional oasis polyculture systems for several thousand years.

 Keywords:

date palm, Phoenix dactylifera, Phoenix sylvestris, Phoenix atlantica, crop domestication, whole-genome sequencing, seed morphometrics, microsatellites, genome annotation, demographic inference

Dates harvested in a garden of Siwa oasis (Egypt), Nov. 11th, 2014,© Vincent Battesti
© Vincent Battesti
the_discovery_of_wild_date_palms_gros-balthazard_2017.pdf

Gros-Balthazard, Muriel, et al., 2017 — « The Discovery of Wild Date Palms in Oman Reveals a Complex Domestication History Involving Centers in the Middle East and Africa ». Current Biology, 27 (14), p. 2211–2218.e8