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      Traditional Amerindian cultivators combine directional and ideotypic selection for sustainable management of cassava genetic diversity.

      1 , , , ,
      Journal of evolutionary biology
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Plant domestication provides striking examples of rapid evolution. Yet, it involves more complex processes than plain directional selection. Understanding the dynamics of diversity in traditional agroecosystems is both a fundamental goal in evolutionary biology and a practical goal in conservation. We studied how Amerindian cultivators maintain dynamically evolving gene pools in cassava. Farmers purposely maintain diversity in the form of phenotypically distinct, clonally propagated landraces. Landrace gene pools are continuously renewed by incorporating seedlings issued from spontaneous sexual reproduction. This poses two problems: agronomic quality may decrease because some seedlings are inbred, and landrace identity may be progressively lost through the incorporation of unrelated seedlings. Using a large microsatellite dataset, we show that farmers solve these problems by applying two kinds of selection: directional selection against inbred genotypes, and counter-selection of off-type phenotypes, which maintains high intra-landrace relatedness. Thus, cultural elements such as ideotypes (a representation of the ideal phenotype of a landrace) can shape genetic diversity.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J. Evol. Biol.
          Journal of evolutionary biology
          Wiley
          1420-9101
          1010-061X
          Jun 2009
          : 22
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] CEFE UMR5175, Montpellier, France. anne.duputie@ens-lyon.org
          Article
          JEB1749
          10.1111/j.1420-9101.2009.01749.x
          19490386
          6ba77314-920b-4b41-b453-243e247fad34
          History

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