The Evolution of Animal Domestication

The domestication of plants and animals over the past 11,500 years has had a significant effect not just on the domesticated taxa but also on human evolution and on the biosphere as a whole. Decades of research into the geographical and chronological origins of domestic animals have led to a general...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Annual review of ecology, evolution, and systematics evolution, and systematics, 2014-11, Vol.45 (1), p.115-136
Main Authors: Larson, Greger, Fuller, Dorian Q
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The domestication of plants and animals over the past 11,500 years has had a significant effect not just on the domesticated taxa but also on human evolution and on the biosphere as a whole. Decades of research into the geographical and chronological origins of domestic animals have led to a general understanding of the pattern and process of domestication, though a number of significant questions remain unresolved. Here, building upon recent theoretical advances regarding the different pathways animals followed to become domesticated, we present a large-scale synthesis that addresses the global pattern of animal domestication alongside a discussion of the differential evolutionary processes that have shaped domestic animal populations. More specifically, we present a framework for understanding how unconscious selection characterized the earliest steps of animal domestication and the role of introgression and the importance of relaxed and positive selection in shaping modern domestic phenotypes and genomes.
ISSN:1543-592X
1545-2069
DOI:10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-110512-135813