# Evidence of Hybrid Origin for Domesticated Spondias (Anacardiaceae) Taxa from Northeastern Brazil: A Picture of Ongoing Domestication of Fruit Species

**Authors:** Marlon Câmara Machado, Alessandra Selbach-Schnadelbach, Cássio van den Berg

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/plants15050773 · Plants · 2026-03-03

## TL;DR

This study confirms that certain domesticated Spondias fruit species in northeastern Brazil originated from hybridization between native and introduced species.

## Contribution

The study provides genetic evidence confirming the hybrid origin of domesticated Spondias taxa and identifies specific parent species involved in hybridization.

## Key findings

- Hybrid taxa like S. bahiensis and 'umbu-cajá' are confirmed to have originated from specific parent species.
- Hybrid lineages involving S. purpurea are shown to be F1 generation hybrids.
- Introgression and backcrossing processes are observed in some hybrid lineages.

## Abstract

Hybridization is considered an important process in plant evolution, especially in the origins of domesticated plant taxa, with many crop species being the result of interspecific hybridization events. There are several unidentified lineages of Spondias in the northeastern region of Brazil known only by vernacular names such as ‘cajaguela’, ‘umbu-cajá’, and ‘umbuguela’. These taxa are often regarded as being of hybrid origin, based on supposedly intermediate morphological features. However, the morphology-based hypotheses of hybrid origin and parentage of these Spondias taxa remain largely untested experimentally. We collected 355 accessions of Spondias, including S. bahiensis, other putative hybrid taxa, and both native (S. mombin, S. tuberosa, and S. venulosa) and introduced (S. purpurea) species believed to be the parental taxa. We then reconstructed phylogenies of plastid and nuclear markers and haplotype networks in order to ascertain the genetic affinities between putative hybrids and other Spondias species. All taxa with intermediate morphology were confirmed as hybrids between their putative parental species. All hybrids involving S. purpurea (native to Mexico) appear to be F1 generation. The recently described S. bahiensis is shown to have originated from hybridization between S. tuberosa and S. venulosa. The other ‘umbu-cajá’ taxon found in Northeastern Brazil is revealed to be the result of hybridization between S. mombin and S. tuberosa. Both the northern ‘umbu-cajá’ taxon and S. bahiensis appear to be well-established hybrid lineages and not early-generation hybrids. Additionally, some introgression and backcrossing processes between S. bahiensis and one of the parents was also observed. Our findings confirm the hybrid origins of the domesticated Spondias taxa found in Northeastern Brazil.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Spondias bahiensis (taxon 1577648), Spondias mombin (taxon 80338), Spondias tuberosa (taxon 991123), Spondias venulosa (taxon 1413321), Spondias purpurea (taxon 341683)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Spondias mombin (hog-plum, species) [taxon 80338], Spondias bahiensis (species) [taxon 1577648], Spondias (genus) [taxon 43860], Spondias tuberosa (species) [taxon 991123]

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12987284/full.md

## References

154 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12987284/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12987284