Authors
Adeline Barnaud, Monique Deu, Eric Garine, Jacques Chantereau, Justin Bolteu, Esaei Ouin Koïda, Doyle McKey, Hélène I Joly
Publication date
2009/10
Journal
American Journal of Botany
Volume
96
Issue
10
Pages
1869-1879
Publisher
Botanical Society of America
Description
Despite the major ecological and economic impacts of gene flow between domesticated plants and their wild relatives, many aspects of the process, particularly the relative roles of natural and human selection in facilitating or constraining gene flow, are still poorly understood. We developed a multidisciplinary approach, involving both biologists and social scientists, to investigate the dynamics of genetic diversity of a sorghum weed–crop complex in a village of Duupa farmers in northern Cameroon. Farmers distinguish a gradient from weedy morphotypes (naa baa see, haariya, and genkiya) to domesticated morphotypes; haariya and genkiya have intermediate morphological traits. We investigated the pattern of diversity in this complex using both morphological and genetic data. Our biological results are interpreted in the light of data on farmers’ taxonomy and practices such as spatial pattern of planting and plant …
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