Social network analysis of the genealogy of strawberry: retracing the wild roots of heirloom and modern cultivars

Author:

Pincot Dominique D. A1ORCID,Ledda Mirko1ORCID,Feldmann Mitchell J1ORCID,Hardigan Michael A1,Poorten Thomas J1,Runcie Daniel E1ORCID,Heffelfinger Christopher2,Dellaporta Stephen L2,Cole Glenn S1,Knapp Steven J1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA

2. Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USA

Abstract

Abstract The widely recounted story of the origin of cultivated strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa) oversimplifies the complex interspecific hybrid ancestry of the highly admixed populations from which heirloom and modern cultivars have emerged. To develop deeper insights into the three-century-long domestication history of strawberry, we reconstructed the genealogy as deeply as possible—pedigree records were assembled for 8,851 individuals, including 2,656 cultivars developed since 1775. The parents of individuals with unverified or missing pedigree records were accurately identified by applying an exclusion analysis to array-genotyped single-nucleotide polymorphisms. We identified 187 wild octoploid and 1,171 F. × ananassa founders in the genealogy, from the earliest hybrids to modern cultivars. The pedigree networks for cultivated strawberry are exceedingly complex labyrinths of ancestral interconnections formed by diverse hybrid ancestry, directional selection, migration, admixture, bottlenecks, overlapping generations, and recurrent hybridization with common ancestors that have unequally contributed allelic diversity to heirloom and modern cultivars. Fifteen to 333 ancestors were predicted to have transmitted 90% of the alleles found in country-, region-, and continent-specific populations. Using parent–offspring edges in the global pedigree network, we found that selection cycle lengths over the past 200 years of breeding have been extraordinarily long (16.0-16.9 years/generation), but decreased to a present-day range of 6.0-10.0 years/generation. Our analyses uncovered conspicuous differences in the ancestry and structure of North American and European populations, and shed light on forces that have shaped phenotypic diversity in F. × ananassa.

Funder

United States Department of Agriculture

National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) Specialty Crops Research Initiative

California Strawberry Commission

UCD

National Science Foundation Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology

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