# Phylogenetics and evolution of Digitaria grasses, including cereal crops fonio, raishan and Polish millet

**Authors:** George P Burton, Paolo Ceci, Lorna MacKinnon, Lizo E Masters, Noro Fenitra Harimbao Randrianarimanana, Philippa Ryan, Colin G N Turnbull, Tiziana Ulian, Maria S Vorontsova

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcaf212 · Annals of Botany · 2025-10-06

## TL;DR

This study explores the evolution and phylogeny of Digitaria grasses, including important millet crops like fonio and raishan, to identify wild relatives and improve future breeding efforts.

## Contribution

The study provides a comprehensive phylogeny and biogeographic history of Digitaria crops, identifying new close wild relatives and their evolutionary divergence.

## Key findings

- Four distinct evolutionary lineages were identified among Digitaria crops.
- South and eastern Africa are proposed as the origin of early Digitaria divergence.
- Incomplete domestication traits, such as loss of trichomes, were observed without clear morphological changes in spikelets.

## Abstract

Millet crops in the grass genus Digitaria include white and black fonio (D. exilis and D. iburua), raishan (D. compacta) and Polish millet (D. sanguinalis), cultivated across West Africa, India and Europe. Fonio and raishan crops are important in supporting food security and subsistence agricultural systems in rural communities, while D. sanguinalis is no longer cultivated. These crops are resilient to challenging climates. We aim to produce an integrated study of these crops: a phylogeny of the Digitaria genus including all four food species, to identify key crop wild relatives; time-calibrated biogeographic analysis, to investigate the history and evolution of Digitaria; and a morphological study to assess the transition between wild and domesticated species.

We use the Angiosperms353 target-enrichment sequencing approach to produce maximum likelihood and coalescent model nuclear phylogenies for 46 Digitaria species, and Bayesian methods to propose an evolutionary and biogeographic history for the genus. Morphology of wild and cultivated species is investigated for spikelets and growth habits using microscopy and SEM imaging.

Four distinct evolutionary lineages are found for the Digitaria crops, and we identify new close crop wild relatives D. fuscescens, D. atrofusca, D. setigera, D. radicosa, and D. ciliaris. South and eastern Africa is proposed as a likely origin of early Digitaria divergence, with crop lineages diverging from wild relatives around 2–6 mya. Incomplete domestication traits are observed, including the loss of trichomes, but no clear change in appearance for spikelet or abscission zone morphologies.

The knowledge produced in this study about Digitaria crop wild relatives will be useful in improving crop traits through targeted breeding and physiological studies, and we also highlight the need for conservation of seed material through programmes working with local partners for these important climate-tolerant indigenous cereals.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Digitaria exilis (taxon 1010633), Digitaria iburua (taxon 3380828), Digitaria sanguinalis (taxon 121769), Digitaria fuscescens (taxon 1878973), Digitaria atrofusca (taxon 2057656), Digitaria setigera (taxon 158097), Digitaria radicosa (taxon 158096), Digitaria ciliaris (taxon 66018)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Digitaria sanguinalis (species) [taxon 121769], Digitaria radicosa (species) [taxon 158096], Digitaria atrofusca (species) [taxon 2057656], Digitaria (genus) [taxon 1582144]

## Full text

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## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12784079/full.md

## References

124 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12784079/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12784079