Jeanty Angèle, Bouby Laurent, Mureau Cyprien, d'Oliveira Léa, Dham Camille, Lecomte Célia, Bonhomme Vincent, Ivorra Sarah, Martinez Natàlia Alonso, Antolín Ferran, Buxó Ramon, Figueiral Isabel, Hallavant Charlotte, Reyes Dani Lopez, Marinval Philippe, Martin Lucie, Pinaud-Querrac'h Rachël, Rovira Núria, Ruas Marie-Pierre, Peyron Odile, Ros Jérome, Evin Allowen
Institut des sciences de l'évolution de Montpellier, Université Montpellier, CNRS, IRD, 34090 Montpellier, France.
Grup d'Investigació Prehistòrica, Universitat de Lleida, E-25003 Lleida, Spain.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2025 May;380(1926):20240194. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2024.0194. Epub 2025 May 15.
The past agrobiodiversity and evolution of barley, a staple cereal in the northwestern Mediterranean region for the last 8000 years, is still poorly documented. This study employed an intensive sampling strategy to analyse morphometric variation of 9817 grains (264 samples and 102 sites), dating from the Neolithic to the Late Middle Ages, from southern France and Catalonia. We utilized an archaeophenomic approach to quantify grain size and shape through elliptic Fourier transformation. We contrasted the variation of archaeological grains with that of 6397 caryopses from 105 modern Euro-Mediterranean varieties of 2-row/6-row subspecies, hulled/naked types. Past climate conditions in southern France/Catalonia were investigated to provide an environmental framework for interpreting morphometric variation. Barley grains increased in size, and changed in shape over time, likely owing to a combination of factors, including environmental adaptation and human selection, coupled with changes in agricultural practices. Naked barley was prevalent during the Neolithic, while the proportion of hulled barley increased from the Late Bronze Age onwards. In contrast, subspecies were identified in all assemblages, without clear temporal trends but with strong variation between assemblages. This study uncovers a complex interplay of environmental and human factors in cereal evolution, highlighting the evolution of agrobiodiversity that fuelled the development of modern societies.This article is part of the theme issue 'Unravelling domestication: multi-disciplinary perspectives on human and non-human relationships in the past, present and future'.
过去8000年来一直作为地中海西北部地区主要谷物的大麦,其农业生物多样性和进化情况仍缺乏充分记录。本研究采用密集采样策略,分析了来自法国南部和加泰罗尼亚的9817粒谷物(264个样本和102个地点)的形态测量变异,这些谷物年代从新石器时代到中世纪晚期。我们利用考古表型学方法,通过椭圆傅里叶变换来量化谷物的大小和形状。我们将考古谷物的变异与来自105个现代欧洲 - 地中海2行/6行亚种、带壳/裸粒类型的6397颗颖果的变异进行了对比。对法国南部/加泰罗尼亚过去的气候条件进行了调查,以提供一个环境框架来解释形态测量变异。随着时间的推移,大麦粒尺寸增大且形状发生变化,这可能是多种因素共同作用的结果,包括环境适应、人类选择以及农业实践的变化。裸大麦在新石器时代很普遍,而带壳大麦的比例从青铜时代晚期开始增加。相比之下,在所有组合中都能识别出亚种,虽然没有明显的时间趋势,但组合之间存在很大差异。本研究揭示了谷物进化过程中环境和人类因素的复杂相互作用,突出了推动现代社会发展的农业生物多样性的进化。本文是主题为“揭示驯化:关于过去、现在和未来人类与非人类关系的多学科视角”这一主题特刊的一部分。