Affiliation:
1. Conservation Department Red Butte Garden, University of Utah Salt Lake City 84108 Utah USA
2. Natural History Museum of Utah University of Utah Salt Lake City 84108 Utah USA
3. Department of Horticulture University of Wisconsin‐Madison 1575 Linden Drive Madison 53706 Wisconsin USA
4. USDA/ARS, U.S. Potato Genebank 4312 Highway 42 Sturgeon Bay 54235 Wisconsin USA
5. Department of Anthropology, Natural History Museum of Utah University of Utah Salt Lake City 84108 Utah USA
Abstract
AbstractPremiseThe domestication of wild plant species can begin with gathering and transport of propagules by Indigenous peoples. The effect on genomic composition, especially in clonal, self‐incompatible perennials would be instantaneous and drastic with respect to new, anthropogenic populations subsequently established. Reductions in genetic diversity and mating capability would be symptomatic and the presence of unique alleles and genetic sequences would reveal the origins and ancestry of populations associated with archaeological sites. The current distribution of the Four Corners potato, Solanum jamesii Torr. in the Southwestern USA, may thus reflect the early stages of a domestication process that began with tuber transport.MethodsHerein genetic sequencing (GBS) data are used to further examine the hypothesis of domestication in this culturally significant species by sampling 25 archaeological and non‐archaeological populations.ResultsArchaeological populations from Utah, Colorado and northern Arizona have lower levels of polymorphic loci, unique alleles, and heterozygosity than non‐archaeological populations from the Mogollon region of central Arizona and New Mexico. Principle components analysis, Fst values, and structure analysis revealed that genetic relationships among archaeological populations did not correspond to geographic proximity. Populations in Escalante, Utah were related to those on the Mogollon Rim (400 km south) and had multiple origins and significant disjunctions with those populations in Bears Ears, Chaco Canyon, and Mesa Verde sites.ConclusionsMovement of tubers from the Mogollon region may have occurred many times and in multiple directions during the past, resulting in the complex genetic patterns seen in populations from across the Four Corners region.