TY - JOUR
T1 - Tracing ancestor rice of Suriname Maroons back to its African origin
AU - Van Andel, Tinde R.
AU - Meyer, Rachel S.
AU - Aflitos, Saulo A.
AU - Carney, Judith A.
AU - Veltman, Margaretha A.
AU - Copetti, Dario
AU - Flowers, Jonathan M.
AU - Havinga, Reinout M.
AU - Maat, Harro
AU - Purugganan, Michael D.
AU - Wing, Rod A.
AU - Schranz, M. Eric
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank rice farmers in Jawjaw, Mundje Kreek, Mooytaki and Paramaribo for sharing their knowledge on African rice with us. T. Polimé and B. Poeketie facilitated fieldwork in Maroon communities. C.-R. Lee helped us with the TPS analysis. This research was funded by the Biosystematics group of Wageningen University, Naturalis Biodiversity Center (Leiden), as well as support from NSF Plant Genome to R.S.M. (IOS-1202803) and M.D.P. (IOS-1126971), a TKI-Horticulture Grant to M.E.S. and S.A.A., grants from the US National Science Foundation and the NYU Abu Dhabi Research Institute to J.M.F., and the AXA Chair in Genome Biology and Evolutionary Genomics to R.A.W.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 The Author(s).
PY - 2016/10/3
Y1 - 2016/10/3
N2 - African rice (Oryza glaberrima) and African cultivation practices are said to have influenced emerging colonial plantation economies in the Americas 1,2. However, the level of impact of African rice practices is difficult to establish because of limited written or botanical records 2,3. Recent findings of O. glaberrima in rice fields of Suriname Maroons bear evidence of the high level of knowledge about rice among African slaves and their descendants, who consecrate it in ancestor rituals 4,5. Here we establish the strong similarity, and hence likely origin, of the first extant New World landrace of O. glaberrima to landraces from the Upper Guinean forests in West Africa. We collected African rice from a Maroon market in Paramaribo, Suriname, propagated it, sequenced its genome 6 and compared it with genomes of 109 accessions representing O. glaberrima diversity across West Africa. By analysing 1,649,769 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in clustering analyses, the Suriname sample appears sister to an Ivory Coast landrace, and shows no evidence of introgression from Asian rice. Whereas the Dutch took most slaves from Ghana, Benin and Central Africa 7, the diaries of slave ship captains record the purchase of food for provisions when sailing along the West African Coast 8, offering one possible explanation for the patterns of genetic similarity. This study demonstrates the utility of genomics in understanding the largely unwritten histories of crop cultures of diaspora communities.
AB - African rice (Oryza glaberrima) and African cultivation practices are said to have influenced emerging colonial plantation economies in the Americas 1,2. However, the level of impact of African rice practices is difficult to establish because of limited written or botanical records 2,3. Recent findings of O. glaberrima in rice fields of Suriname Maroons bear evidence of the high level of knowledge about rice among African slaves and their descendants, who consecrate it in ancestor rituals 4,5. Here we establish the strong similarity, and hence likely origin, of the first extant New World landrace of O. glaberrima to landraces from the Upper Guinean forests in West Africa. We collected African rice from a Maroon market in Paramaribo, Suriname, propagated it, sequenced its genome 6 and compared it with genomes of 109 accessions representing O. glaberrima diversity across West Africa. By analysing 1,649,769 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in clustering analyses, the Suriname sample appears sister to an Ivory Coast landrace, and shows no evidence of introgression from Asian rice. Whereas the Dutch took most slaves from Ghana, Benin and Central Africa 7, the diaries of slave ship captains record the purchase of food for provisions when sailing along the West African Coast 8, offering one possible explanation for the patterns of genetic similarity. This study demonstrates the utility of genomics in understanding the largely unwritten histories of crop cultures of diaspora communities.
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U2 - 10.1038/nplants.2016.149
DO - 10.1038/nplants.2016.149
M3 - Letter
C2 - 27694825
AN - SCOPUS:84989827434
SN - 2055-026X
VL - 2
JO - Nature plants
JF - Nature plants
M1 - 16149
ER -