A brief history of the origin of domesticated date palms
Muriel Gros-Balthazard, Jonathan M. Flowers

TL;DR
This paper reviews the current understanding of the origins and domestication process of the date palm, integrating genetic, archaeological, and evolutionary perspectives to clarify its domestication history.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive synthesis of recent genetic and archaeological evidence on date palm domestication and discusses different models explaining its origins.
Findings
Evidence suggests multiple domestication events.
Genetic data shows divergence from wild relatives.
Human activities significantly influenced domestication traits.
Abstract
The study of the origins of crops is of interest from both a fundamental evolutionary understanding viewpoint, and from an applied agricultural technology perspective. The date palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.) is the iconic fruit crop of hot and arid regions of North Africa and the Middle East, producing sugar-rich fruits, known as dates. There are many different cultivars each with distinctive fruit traits, and there are many wild Phoenix species too, which in total form a complex of related species. The understanding of plant domestication involves multiple disciplines, including phylogeography, population genetics and archaeology. In the past decade, they have prompted new discoveries on the evolutionary history of date palm, but a complete understanding of its origins remains to be elucidated, along with the genetic architecture of its domestication syndrome. In this chapter, we review…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDate Palm Research Studies · Genetic and Environmental Crop Studies · Genetic diversity and population structure
