中国农业科学 ›› 2025, Vol. 58 ›› Issue (21): 4305-4316.doi: 10.3864/j.issn.0578-1752.2025.21.001

• 作物遗传育种·种质资源·分子遗传学 • 上一篇    下一篇

荞麦的起源、进化与传播

魏益民1(), 周美亮2(), 唐宇3   

  1. 1 中国农业科学院农产品加工研究所/农业农村部粮油加工综合利用技术集成实验室,北京 100193
    2 中国农业科学院作物科学研究所,北京 100081
    3 四川旅游学院,成都 610100
  • 收稿日期:2025-04-14 接受日期:2025-08-09 出版日期:2025-11-01 发布日期:2025-11-06
  • 联系方式: 魏益民,E-mail:weiyimin36@126.com。周美亮,E-mail:zhoumeiliang@caas.cn
  • 基金资助:
    国家现代农业产业技术体系建设专项(CARS-03); 中国农业科学院科技创新工程(CAAS-ASTIP); 河北金沙河集团技术合作项目(2007-2025)

Origin, Evolution and Spread of Crop Buckwheat

WEI YiMin1(), ZHOU MeiLiang2(), TANG Yu3   

  1. 1 Institute of Food Science and Technology, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences/Comprehensive Utilization Laboratory of Cereal and Oil Processing, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Beijing 100193
    2 Institute of Crop Sciences, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing 100081
    3 Sichuan Tourism College, Chengdu 610100
  • Received:2025-04-14 Accepted:2025-08-09 Published:2025-11-01 Online:2025-11-06

摘要:

中国是世界四大农业起源中心之一,分别形成了以长江中下游为代表的稻作农业系统和以黄河流域为代表的旱作农业系统。历史文献和考古证据均表明,早在殷商时期的甲骨文中,已出现黍、稷、麦、稻、菽等作物的名称,在先秦时期确立了“五谷”概念,而《诗经》中也出现了“百谷”这一泛指粮食作物的称谓。但令人关注的是,在上述“五谷”或主粮体系中,荞麦这一源于中国的作物却长期未被明确记载。这一缺位现象,与荞麦作为我国特有的原产作物、拥有极高遗传多样性和地方变异类型、并在冷凉山区长期栽培驯化的事实不符。本文通过对荞麦起源、进化与传播相关文献的系统梳理,结合植物考古学最新发现与遗传多样性数据分析,遵循作物起源中心判定原则,综合历史文献、生物学特征、分布规律等多元证据,系统论证了中国西南地区(尤其是云南、四川、贵州、青藏高原南缘)作为荞麦属植物的起源地、遗传多样性中心和驯化中心的科学依据。研究指出,中国境内荞麦属植物共23个种,其中包括甜荞麦、苦荞麦、金荞麦3个栽培种,及20个野生种,绝大多数集中分布于中国西南部。这一区域不仅是甜荞和苦荞2个栽培种的祖先类型(亚种)——F. esculentum ssp. ancestraleF. tataricum ssp. potanini的自然分布地,也是荞麦属多样性最丰富的区域,体现出强烈的原产地特征。同时,分子标记和系统发育学研究也证实,中国西南部的野生荞麦与栽培种在遗传上具有密切亲缘关系,为驯化路径的建立提供了明确线索。随着现代研究的深入,荞麦不仅以其短生育期、广适性、耐瘠耐寒等生物学优势在边远冷凉山区得到广泛推广,更因其籽粒富含蛋白质、黄酮类化合物与功能性糖醇,成为极具开发潜力的功能性杂粮作物。荞麦特别适合发展中西部特色农业,兼具生态价值与营养保健潜能,未来在国家营养战略、粮食多样性保护及高附加值农业发展中具有重要作用。本研究为科学认定中国作为荞麦起源与驯化中心提供了理论支撑与实证依据,亦为后续开展荞麦种质资源保护、品种改良与产业发展奠定基础。

关键词: 荞麦, 起源, 遗传多样性中心, 作物驯化, 植物考古学证据, 传播

Abstract:

China is one of the four major centers of agricultural origin in the world, where two distinct agricultural systems were established: the rice-based system represented by the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River, and the dryland farming system represented by the Yellow River basin. Historical records and archaeological evidence indicate that as early as the Shang Dynasty, oracle bone inscriptions already mentioned crops such as millet (Setaria italica), broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum), wheat, rice, and soybeans. During the pre-Qin period, the concept of the ‘Five Grains’ was established, and in The Book of Songs (Shijing), the broader term ‘Hundred Grains’ also appeared as a general reference to food crops. However, it is noteworthy that buckwheat, a crop native to China, has long been absent from these documented grain systems. This omission is inconsistent with the fact that buckwheat is an indigenous Chinese crop with high genetic diversity, significant local variation, and a long history of cultivation and domestication in cold mountainous regions. This study conducts a systematic review of the literature related to the origin, evolution, and spread of buckwheat, integrating recent findings in archaeobotany and genetic diversity analysis. Following internationally accepted principles for identifying crop origin centers, and drawing on historical texts, biological characteristics, and distribution patterns, the study presents comprehensive evidence supporting the hypothesis that southwestern China-particularly Yunnan, Sichuan, Guizhou, and the southern fringe of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau-is the center of origin, genetic diversity, and domestication for Fagopyrum species. There are 23 species of Fagopyrum identified in China, including three cultivated species-common buckwheat (F. esculentum), tartary buckwheat (F. tataricum), and golden buckwheat (F. cymosum)-and 20 wild species, the majority of which are concentrated in southwestern China. This region is not only the native habitat of the ancestral subspecies of common and tartary buckwheat (F. esculentum ssp. ancestrale and F. tataricum ssp. potanini), but also the area with the richest diversity of Fagopyrum, strongly indicating its status as the origin center. Furthermore, molecular markers and phylogenetic studies confirm close genetic relationships between wild and cultivated buckwheat species in this region, providing key evidence for reconstructing domestication pathways. With advancements in modern research, buckwheat has gained recognition not only for its short growth cycle, broad adaptability, and resilience to poor soils and cold climates, making it suitable for cultivation in remote and mountainous areas, but also for its grain's rich content of proteins, flavonoids, and functional sugar alcohols. As a highly promising functional coarse grain crop, buckwheat is particularly suited to the development of characteristic agriculture in central and western China. It holds significant potential for ecological sustainability, nutritional health, and high-value agricultural development, and is expected to play an important role in China’s national nutrition strategy and food diversity conservation. This study provides theoretical and empirical evidence to support the scientific designation of China as the center of origin and domestication of buckwheat, laying a solid foundation for future work in germplasm conservation, variety improvement, and industrial development.

Key words: buckwheat, origin, center of genetic diversity, crop domestication, archaeobotanical evidence, dissemination