3. Ethnobotanical Origins, Early Cultivation, and Evolution through Human Selection

Cannabis ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 29-58
Keyword(s):  
2011 ◽  
Vol 77 (8) ◽  
pp. 2772-2784 ◽  
Author(s):  
Warren Albertin ◽  
Philippe Marullo ◽  
Michel Aigle ◽  
Christine Dillmann ◽  
Dominique de Vienne ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTAlcoholic fermentation (AF) conducted bySaccharomyces cerevisiaehas been exploited for millennia in three important human food processes: beer and wine production and bread leavening. Most of the efforts to understand and improve AF have been made separately for each process, with strains that are supposedly well adapted. In this work, we propose a first comparison of yeast AFs in three synthetic media mimicking the dough/wort/grape must found in baking, brewing, and wine making. The fermentative behaviors of nine food-processing strains were evaluated in these media, at the cellular, populational, and biotechnological levels. A large variation in the measured traits was observed, with medium effects usually being greater than the strain effects. The results suggest that human selection targeted the ability to complete fermentation for wine strains and trehalose content for beer strains. Apart from these features, the food origin of the strains did not significantly affect AF, suggesting that an improvement program for a specific food processing industry could exploit the variability of strains used in other industries. Glucose utilization was analyzed, revealing plastic but also genetic variation in fermentation products and indicating that artificial selection could be used to modify the production of glycerol, acetate, etc. The major result was that the overall maximum CO2production rate (Vmax) was not related to the maximum CO2production rate per cell. Instead, a highly significant correlation betweenVmaxand the maximum population size was observed in all three media, indicating that human selection targeted the efficiency of cellular reproduction rather than metabolic efficiency. This result opens the way to new strategies for yeast improvement.


1995 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 387-391 ◽  
Author(s):  
Getachew Belay ◽  
T. Tesemma ◽  
E. Bechere ◽  
D. Mitiku

2007 ◽  
Vol 274 (1629) ◽  
pp. 3119-3126 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Toby Kiers ◽  
Mark G Hutton ◽  
R. Ford Denison
Keyword(s):  

1963 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 737 ◽  
Author(s):  
TA Bull ◽  
KT Glasziou

Sugar levels in the various species of the Saccharum complex suggest an evolutionary increase in sugar content. Under suitable ecological conditions, survival through sucker growth may be dependent on rapid mobilization of stored carbohydrate. Selection pressure for sucrose storage would then oocur if sucrose was more readily remobilized than other storage carbohydrates. It is suggested that this ecological situation occurred in New Guinea, and that natural and not human selection lead to the evolution of S. oJJicinarum.


Author(s):  
Ungkap Siahaan, Harlem Marpaung, Tamrin

Cannabis (Cannabissativa L.) is an annual plant, which can grow and spread in tropical or sub-tropical regions with a height of one to five meters (Emcdda, 2015). Human selection is done for various uses and climate-influenced natural selection produces various varieties and chemical compositions. Analysis of the chemical content of cannabis (Cannabis sativa L) as a result of confiscation in the Aceh Regional Police, namely Lhokseumawe Regional Police, Pidie Regional Police, East Aceh Regional Police (Idi Rayeuk), Benar Meriah Regional Police and Central Aceh Regional Police (Takengon) were conducted by GC-MS method. Cannabis was extracted with n-hexane and marijuana extract was analyzed by GC-MS. ?9-THC and CBC compounds were found in all marijuana samples, CBN was found in 4 origin areas except Central Aceh Police Station, 2-Metoxy-5-isopropilaxy-7-propenylnaphthquinone was found in two police stations from Pidie Police and Central Aceh District Police. The biggest concentration of ?9-THC is 80.92% of the East Aceh Police Station; ?9-THCV is from two original police stations, namely East Aceh Police and Benar Meriah Police; CBN is the biggest 14.25% of Polres Benar Meriah; The biggest CBC is 10.98 from the East Aceh District Police..


Heritage ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 4233-4248
Author(s):  
László Bartosiewicz

A stray find of red deer antler from Sweden with the braincase was collected due to an apparently pathological deformation, the strongly retarded right antler. Measurements of the complete left antler inspired the analysis of general antler conformation in order to place this archaeological specimen in a zoological context. This stray find and another prehistoric antler from Sweden as well as three complete prehistoric antlers from Hungary were metrically compared using measurements of over 17,000 trophies of extant red deer from Hungary. The results confirmed that the stray specimen from Sweden and prehistoric antlers from Hungary were similar in that they were stouter (smaller length measurements but greater circumferences) than their 20th century counterparts. Most of their measurements fell within the ±1 standard deviation interval of the means of extant trophies. The pathological lesion on the studied stray specimen directed attention to the role of human selection. Twentieth century record trophies show a significant increase in antler weight and “quality” as defined in the international trophy grading system. While these morphometric observations cannot be taken as a proxy for absolute dating or precise contextual identification for the stray find central to this study, its size and apparent lack of consistent human selection (pathological deformation, “archaic” antler proportions) point to possibly early origins, prior to major human influence.


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