TY - JOUR
T1 - Brassica and Sinapis Seeds in Medieval Archaeological Sites
T2 - An Example of Multiproxy Analysis for Their Identification and Ethnobotanical Interpretation
AU - Bosi, Giovanna
AU - De Felice, Simona
AU - Wilkinson, Michael J.
AU - Allainguillaume, Joël
AU - Arru, Laura
AU - Nascimbene, Juri
AU - Buldrini, Fabrizio
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was funded by the University of Aberystwyth (part of aDNA analysis).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 by the authors.
PY - 2022/8/12
Y1 - 2022/8/12
N2 - The genus Brassica includes some of the most important vegetable and oil crops worldwide. Many Brassica seeds (which can show diagnostic characters useful for species identification) were recovered from two archaeological sites in northern Italy, dated from between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. We tested the combined use of archaeobotanical keys, ancient DNA barcoding, and references to ancient herbarium specimens to address the issue of diagnostic uncertainty. An unequivocal conventional diagnosis was possible for much of the material recovered, with the samples dominated by five Brassica species and Sinapis. The analysis using ancient DNA was restricted to the seeds with a Brassica-type structure and deployed a variant of multiplexed tandem PCR. The quality of diagnosis strongly depended on the molecular locus used. Nevertheless, many seeds were diagnosed down to species level, in concordance with their morphological identification, using one primer set from the core barcode site (matK). The number of specimens found in the Renaissance herbaria was not high; Brassica nigra, which is of great ethnobotanical importance, was the most common taxon. Thus, the combined use of independent means of species identification is particularly important when studying the early use of closely related crops, such as Brassicaceae.
AB - The genus Brassica includes some of the most important vegetable and oil crops worldwide. Many Brassica seeds (which can show diagnostic characters useful for species identification) were recovered from two archaeological sites in northern Italy, dated from between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. We tested the combined use of archaeobotanical keys, ancient DNA barcoding, and references to ancient herbarium specimens to address the issue of diagnostic uncertainty. An unequivocal conventional diagnosis was possible for much of the material recovered, with the samples dominated by five Brassica species and Sinapis. The analysis using ancient DNA was restricted to the seeds with a Brassica-type structure and deployed a variant of multiplexed tandem PCR. The quality of diagnosis strongly depended on the molecular locus used. Nevertheless, many seeds were diagnosed down to species level, in concordance with their morphological identification, using one primer set from the core barcode site (matK). The number of specimens found in the Renaissance herbaria was not high; Brassica nigra, which is of great ethnobotanical importance, was the most common taxon. Thus, the combined use of independent means of species identification is particularly important when studying the early use of closely related crops, such as Brassicaceae.
KW - Ferrara
KW - Lugo
KW - northern Italy
KW - Middle Ages
KW - Renaissance
KW - archaeobotany
KW - a-DNA
KW - herbaria
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85137316926&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/plants11162100
DO - 10.3390/plants11162100
M3 - Article
C2 - 36015403
SN - 2223-7747
VL - 11
JO - Plants
JF - Plants
IS - 16
M1 - e2100
ER -