Peaches Preceded Humans: Fossil Evidence from SW China
Tao Su, Peter Wilf, Yongjiang Huang, Shitao Zhang & Zhekun Zhou
Scientific Reports 5, Article number: 16794 (2015)
doi:10.1038/srep16794
Download Citation
Received: 05 May 2015
Accepted: 16 October 2015
Published online: 26 November 2015
Evolution | Palaeontology
Altmetric: 131More detail
Article | OPEN
Peaches Preceded Humans: Fossil Evidence from SW China
Tao Su, Peter Wilf, Yongjiang Huang, Shitao Zhang & Zhekun Zhou
Scientific Reports 5, Article number: 16794 (2015)
doi:10.1038/srep16794
Abstract
Peach (Prunus persica, Rosaceae) is an extremely popular tree fruit worldwide, with an annual production near 20 million tons. Peach is widely thought to have origins in China, but its evolutionary history is largely unknown. The oldest evidence for the peach has been Chinese archaeological records dating to 8000–7000 BP. Here, we report eight fossil peach endocarps from late Pliocene strata of Kunming City, Yunnan, southwestern China. The fossils are identical to modern peach endocarps, including size comparable to smaller modern varieties, a single seed, a deep dorsal groove, and presence of deep pits and furrows. These fossils show that China has been a critical region for peach evolution since long before human presence, much less agriculture. Peaches evolved their modern morphology under natural selection, presumably involving large, frugivorous mammals such as primates. Much later, peach size and variety increased through domestication and breeding.
FREE PDF GRATIS: Scientific Reports