| Literature DB >> 23538880 |
Abstract
The Evolution of Fruit Tree Productivity: A Review. Domestication of fruit trees has received far less attention than that of annual crop plants. In particular, very little is known about the evolution of fruit tree productivity. In the wild, most tree species reach reproductive maturity after a long period of juvenility and even then, sexual reproduction appears sporadically, often in a mode of masting. Environmental constraints limit trees' reproductive activity in their natural, wild habitats, resulting in poor, irregular productivity. Early fructification and regular, high rates of productivity have been selected by people, unconsciously and consciously. The reviewed evidence indicates an evolutionary continuum of productivity patterns among trees of wild habitats, intermediary domesticates, and the most advanced domesticates. Alternate bearing appears to represent an intermediate step in the fruit tree evolutionary pathway. The existence of a molecular, genetic mechanism that controls trees' sexual reproduction and fruiting pattern is suggested.Entities:
Keywords: Alternate bearing; domestication; masting; sexual reproduction; unconscious selection
Year: 2013 PMID: 23538880 PMCID: PMC3606516 DOI: 10.1007/s12231-012-9219-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Econ Bot ISSN: 0013-0001 Impact factor: 1.731
Presumed evolutionary steps of fruit tree domestication and productivity.
| Wild | Intermediate | Domesticated |
|---|---|---|
| Native, forest habitat | Vicinity of human settlements, Home gardens | Highly managed habitats |
| Seed reproduction | Seed and/or vegetative propagation | Vegetative propagation, grafting |
| Dioecious | Mixed-type flowering | Hermaphrodites, parthenocarpic fruiting |
| Extended juvenility | Reduced juvenility | Juvenility short, or absent |
| Environmental constraints, wild plant competition, biotic and abiotic stresses | Partial relief of environmental stresses | Management of nutritional and biotic stresses |
| Irregular fruiting, masting | Alternate bearing | Regular fruiting |