4.3 Article

A model for the domestication of Panicum miliaceum (common, proso or broomcorn millet) in China

Journal

VEGETATION HISTORY AND ARCHAEOBOTANY
Volume 30, Issue 1, Pages 21-33

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00334-020-00804-z

Keywords

Origins of agriculture; Cultivation; Neolithic; Palaeoethnobotany; Shattering; Grain size

Funding

  1. European Research Council grant Comparative Pathways to Agriculture (ComPAg) [323842]
  2. Israel Science Foundation [501/11, 728/17]
  3. National Geographic Society [8 614-09]

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This paper outlines a model for the domestication of Panicum miliaceum in Northern China, showing a continuous increase in grain size between 6000 and 3300 bc and a later divergence in populations. It suggests that the process of domestication likely took place between 7000 and 3300 bc, with a period of millet harvesting and small-scale management preceding it. It also indicates that the sub-species P. ruderale may not be representative of the true wild ancestor of P. miliaceum.
This paper outlines a model for the domestication of Panicum miliaceum (broomcorn millet) in Northern China. Data from 43 archaeological sites indicate a continuous increase in average grain size between 6000 and 3300 bc. After this date there is a divergence, with grain size continuing to increase in some populations, while others show no further size increase. The initial increase in grain size is attributed to selection during domestication, while later divergence after 3300 bc is interpreted as resulting from post-domestication selection. Measurements of grains from two archaeological populations of P. ruderale, showed grains were longer in length by 3300 bc than the earliest grains of P. miliaceum. This suggests this sub-species includes many feral, weedy and/or introgressed forms of P. miliaceum and therefore is probably not entirely representative of the true wild ancestor. It is argued that changes from shattering to non-shattering are contemporary with increasing grain size and the commencement of cultivation. The window of P. miliaceum domestication is therefore likely to lie between 7000 and 3300 bc. However, it is probable that a lengthy period of millet harvesting and small-scale management preceded its domestication.

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