Genome-wide footprints in the carob tree (Ceratonia siliqua) unveil a
new domestication pattern of fruit trees in the Mediterranean
Abstract
Intense research efforts on phylogeography over the last two decades
uncovered major biogeographical trends and renewed our understandings of
plant domestication in the Mediterranean. We aim to investigate the
evolutionary history and the origin of domestication of the carob tree
that has been cultivated for millennia for food and fodder. We used
>1000 microsatellite genotypes to identify carob
evolutionary units (CEUs) based on genetic diversity structure and
geography. We investigated genome-wide diversity and evolutionary
patterns of the CEUs with 3557 SNPs generated by restriction-site
associated DNA sequencing (RADseq). The 56 populations sampled across
the Mediterranean basin, classified as natural, semi-natural or
cultivated, were examined. Although, RADseq data are consistent with
previous studies identifying a strong West-to-East genetic structure and
considerable admixture in some geographic parts, we reconstructed a new
phylogeographic scenario with two migration routes occurring from a
single refugium likely located in South-Western Morocco. Our results do
not favour the regionally bound or single origin of domestication.
Indeed, our findings support a cultivation model of locally selected
wild genotypes, albeit punctuated by long-distance westward dispersals
of domesticated varieties by humans, concomitant with major cultural
waves by Romans and Arabs in the regions of dispersal. Ex-situ efforts
to preserve carob genetic resources should prioritize accessions from
both western and eastern populations, with emphasis on the most
differentiated CEUs situated in South-Western Morocco, South Spain and
Eastern Mediterranean. Our study underscores the relevance of natural
and seminatural habitats of Mediterranean forests and their refugia in
the conservation efforts of tree crops.