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  1. Apr 24, 2016 · Charles Darwin never found it necessary to define domestication in his two volumes on “The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication” [].Since then, ethnobotanical and other studies have shown that human interactions with plants involve a continuum from simple exploitation of wild populations, through various degrees of management of populations still growing in the wild, to ...

  2. May 1, 2022 · Domestication is a multigenerational coevolutionary process between mutualist species where the domesticator constructs an environment favoring the survival and reproduction of the domesticated ...

  3. Definition. The domestication syndrome can be defined as the characteristic collection of phenotypic traits associated with the genetic change to a domesticated form of an organism from a wild progenitor form. The term “adaptation syndrome” as applied to traits automatically selected through a harvesting regime of cereals was first coined ...

  4. May 15, 2007 · Domestication of all plants and animals led to a reduction in genetic diversity (19, 80, 81), and thus all genes in any domesticated plant necessarily have a history that includes a recent demographic event, the bottleneck associated with domestication . Population subdivision in the wild ancestor, ongoing introgression between the crop and ...

  5. Domesticate definition: to convert (animals, plants, etc.) to domestic uses; tame. . See examples of DOMESTICATE used in a sentence.

  6. Abstract. Plant breeding began when plants were brought into cultivation for human use, as early as 13,000 years ago in the Near East, and subsequently and independently in other parts of the world. Domestication, geographical dispersal to new environments and selection by farmers, resulted in numerous locally adapted landraces of cultivated ...

  7. The domestication of vertebrates is the mutual relationship between vertebrate animals including birds and mammals, and the humans who have influence on their care and reproduction. [1] Charles Darwin recognized a small number of traits that made domesticated species different from their wild ancestors. He was also the first to recognize the ...

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