Multidisciplinary perspectives on banana (Musa spp.) domestication
Perrier Xavier, De Langhe Edmond, Donohue Marc, Lentfer Carol, Vrydaghs Luc, Bakry Frédéric, Carreel Françoise, Hippolyte Isabelle, Horry Jean-Pierre, Jenny Christophe, Lebot Vincent, Risterucci Ange-Marie, Tomekpé Kodjo, Doutrelepont Hugues, Ball Terry, Manwaring Jason, De Maret Pierre, Denham Tim. 2011. PNAS.
Vous devez vous inscrire sur le site pour pouvoir télécharger des documents.
L'inscription est gratuite.
ARTICLE, (2011 ) - PUBLISHEDVERSION - English (en-GB)
PNAS
RESTRICTEDACCESS -
Cirad license.
Audience : RESEARCHERS
PNAS Early Edition
Sujet
F30 - Génétique et amélioration des plantes, F70 - Taxonomie végétale et phytogéographie, Musa, Domestication
Description
Original multidisciplinary research hereby clarifies the complex geodomestication pathways that generated the vast range of banana cultivars (cvs). Genetic analyses identify the wild ancestors of modern-day cvs and elucidate several key stages of domestication for different cv groups. Archaeology and linguistics shed light on the historical roles of people in the movement and cultivation of bananas from New Guinea to West Africa during the Holocene. The historical reconstruction of domestication processes is essential for breeding programs seeking to diversify and improve banana cvs for the future. (Résumé d'auteur)
Mots-clés
plant genetics, historical linguistics, archaeobotany, diploid banana cultivars, triploid banana cultivars
Auteurs
Perrier Xavier, De Langhe Edmond, Donohue Marc, Lentfer Carol, Vrydaghs Luc, Bakry Frédéric, Carreel Françoise, Hippolyte Isabelle, Horry Jean-Pierre, Jenny Christophe, Lebot Vincent, Risterucci Ange-Marie, Tomekpé Kodjo, Doutrelepont Hugues, Ball Terry, Manwaring Jason, De Maret Pierre, Denham Tim
Sources
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Couverture
Papouasie-Nouvelle-Guinée, Afrique occidentale