relation: http://oar.icrisat.org/9543/ title: Multiple post-domestication origins of kabuli chickpea through allelic variation in a diversification-associated transcription factor creator: Penmetsa, R V creator: Carrasquilla-Garcia, N creator: Bergmann, E M creator: Vance, L creator: Castro, B creator: Kassa, M T creator: Sarma, B K creator: Datta, S creator: Farmer, A D creator: Baek, J M creator: Coyne, C J creator: Varshney, R K creator: Wettberg, E J B V creator: Cook, D R subject: Chickpea subject: Food Legumes subject: Genetics and Genomics description: Crop domestication and subsequent diversification represent adaptations to human-built environments and offer insights into the evolutionary forces that shape phenotypic diversity. Chickpea (Cicer arietinum), a widely cultivated food legume, was domesticated in the Fertile Crescent together with several other so-called founder crops (Zohary et al., 2012). This is evidenced by the Neolithic archeological record (Tanno & Wilcox, 2006) and the prevalence of crop wild relatives in the eastern Mediterranean, particularly Cicer reticulatum, the wild annual Cicer species from which the cultigen is derived... publisher: Wiley date: 2016-05-19 type: Article type: PeerReviewed format: application/pdf language: en identifier: http://oar.icrisat.org/9543/1/Penmetsa_et_al-2016-New_Phytologist.pdf identifier: Penmetsa, R V and Carrasquilla-Garcia, N and Bergmann, E M and Vance, L and Castro, B and Kassa, M T and Sarma, B K and Datta, S and Farmer, A D and Baek, J M and Coyne, C J and Varshney, R K and Wettberg, E J B V and Cook, D R (2016) Multiple post-domestication origins of kabuli chickpea through allelic variation in a diversification-associated transcription factor. New Phytologist. 01-12. ISSN 0028-646X relation: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.14010 relation: 10.1111/nph.14010