Zeder Melinda A, Emshwiller Eve, Smith Bruce D, Bradley Daniel G
Archaeobiology Program, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560-0112, USA.
Trends Genet. 2006 Mar;22(3):139-55. doi: 10.1016/j.tig.2006.01.007. Epub 2006 Feb 3.
Domestication, a process of increasing mutual dependence between human societies and the plant and animal populations they target, has long been an area of interest in genetics and archaeology. Geneticists seek out markers of domestication in the genomes of domesticated species, both past and present day. Archaeologists examine the archaeological record for complementary markers--evidence of the human behavior patterns that cause the genetic changes associated with domestication, and the morphological changes in target species that result from them. In this article, we summarize the recent advances in genetics and archaeology in documenting plant and animal domestication, and highlight several promising areas where the complementary perspectives of both disciplines provide reciprocal illumination.
驯化,即人类社会与其所针对的动植物种群之间相互依存度不断增加的过程,长期以来一直是遗传学和考古学关注的领域。遗传学家在过去和现代驯化物种的基因组中寻找驯化标记。考古学家则研究考古记录以寻找互补标记——导致与驯化相关的基因变化的人类行为模式的证据,以及由此产生的目标物种的形态变化。在本文中,我们总结了遗传学和考古学在记录动植物驯化方面的最新进展,并强调了几个有前景的领域,在这些领域中,两个学科的互补观点相互启发。