
AbstractAs an ancient clonal root and leaf crop, taro (Colocasia esculenta, Araceae) is highly polymorphic with uncertain genetic and geographic origins. We explored chloroplast DNA diversity in cultivated and wild taros, and closely related wild taxa, and found cultivated taro to be polyphyletic, with tropical and temperate clades that appear to originate in Southeast Asia sensu lato. A third clade was found exclusively in wild populations from Southeast Asia to Australia and Papua New Guinea. Our findings do not support the hypothesis of taro domestication in Papua New Guinea, despite archaeological evidence for early use or cultivation there, and the presence of apparently natural wild populations in the region (Australia and Papua New Guinea).
Clade, History, Geography, Planning and Development, plant evolution, Social Sciences, Human Settlement in the Pacific Islands, Biochemistry, Gene, Molecular Systematics of Gesneriaceae and Allies, Ancient history, Domestication, Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, Araceae, Southeast asia, Colocasia esculenta, Molecular Biology, Biology, Original Research, Corm, Ecology, Geography, Botany, Life Sciences, Application of Stable Isotopes in Trophic Ecology, New guinea, Temperate climate, Phylogenetics, FOS: Biological sciences, Environmental Science, Physical Sciences, Taxon, Ethnology
Clade, History, Geography, Planning and Development, plant evolution, Social Sciences, Human Settlement in the Pacific Islands, Biochemistry, Gene, Molecular Systematics of Gesneriaceae and Allies, Ancient history, Domestication, Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, Araceae, Southeast asia, Colocasia esculenta, Molecular Biology, Biology, Original Research, Corm, Ecology, Geography, Botany, Life Sciences, Application of Stable Isotopes in Trophic Ecology, New guinea, Temperate climate, Phylogenetics, FOS: Biological sciences, Environmental Science, Physical Sciences, Taxon, Ethnology
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