Domestication Syndrome in Caimito (Chrysophyllum cainito L.): Fruit and Seed Characteristics
Open Access
- 21 May 2010
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by Springer Nature in Economic Botany
- Vol. 64 (2) , 161-175
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s12231-010-9121-4
Abstract
Domestication Syndrome in Caimito ( Chrysophyllum cainito L.): Fruit and Seed Characteristics: The process of domestication is understudied and poorly known for many tropical fruit tree crops. The star apple or caimito tree (Chrysophyllum cainito L., Sapotaceae) is cultivated throughout the New World tropics for its edible fruits. We studied this species in central Panama, where it grows wild in tropical moist forests and is also commonly cultivated in backyard gardens. Using fruits collected over two harvest seasons, we tested the hypothesis that cultivated individuals of C. cainito show distinctive fruit and seed characteristics associated with domestication relative to wild types. We found that cultivated fruits were significantly and substantially larger and allocated more to pulp and less to exocarp than wild fruits. The pulp of cultivated fruits was less acidic; also, the pulp had lower concentrations of phenolics and higher concentrations of sugar. The seeds were larger and more numerous and were less defended with phenolics in cultivated than in wild fruits. Discriminant Analysis showed that, among the many significant differences, fruit size and sugar concentration drove the great majority of the variance distinguishing wild from cultivated classes. Variance of pulp phenolics among individuals was significantly higher among wild trees than among cultivated trees, while variance of fruit mass and seed number was significantly higher among cultivated trees. Most traits showed strong correlations between years. Overall, we found a clear signature of a domestication syndrome in the fruits of cultivated caimito in Panama.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Serendipitous backyard hybridization and the origin of cropsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Domestication of Plants in the Americas: Insights from Mendelian and Molecular GeneticsAnnals of Botany, 2007
- Contrasting Patterns in Crop Domestication and Domestication Rates: Recent Archaeobotanical Insights from the Old WorldAnnals of Botany, 2007
- DOMESTICATING INDIGENOUS FRUIT TREES AS A CONTRIBUTION TO POVERTY REDUCTIONForests, Trees and Livelihoods, 2006
- Domestication potential of Marula (Sclerocarya birrea subsp caffra) in South Africa and Namibia: 2. Phenotypic variation in nut and kernel traitsAgroforestry Systems, 2005
- Domestication potential of Marula (Sclerocarya birrea subsp caffra)in South Africa and Namibia: 1. Phenotypic variation in fruit traitsAgroforestry Systems, 2005
- Traditional management and domestication of tempesquistle, Sideroxylon palmeri (Sapotaceae) in the Tehuacán-Cuicatlán Valley, Central MexicoJournal of Arid Environments, 2004
- The Genetic, Developmental, and Molecular Bases of Fruit Size and Shape Variation in TomatoPlant Cell, 2004
- 6. Domestication rates in wild-type wheats and barley under primitive cultivationBiological Journal of the Linnean Society, 1990
- Comparative Evolution of CerealsEvolution, 1973