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Domesticated Wheat Outcompeted Its Wild Ancestors — And Nobody Planned It

A 2026 Sheffield study shows early wheat landraces became fiercer competitors than wild relatives — driven by steeper leaves and bigger stems, not human intent.

A dense stand of cultivated wheat at maturity, ears erect against a summer sky. The upright, compact canopy of modern wheat varieties is itself the product of deliberate 20th-century breeding — a reversal of the taller, more spreading canopies that early domesticated landraces evolved through compet
Fig. 1 — Mature wheat field at harvest, dense cultivated stand

In This Article

  1. The Oldest Mystery in Agriculture
  2. Why Previous Explanations Left Gaps
  3. How Did Wheat Actually Get More Competitive?
  4. What This Changes for Crop Breeding
  5. The Questions Still Unanswered

Wheat has fed civilisations for ten thousand years, but researchers at the University of Sheffield have just confirmed something about its origins that was, until now, more hypothesis than hard evidence: early farmers didn't just grow wheat — they accidentally made it a better fighter. A study published in Current Biology in 2026 shows that domesticated wheat landraces consistently outcompete their wild ancestors, and the traits responsible — steeper leaves, bigger leaf canopies, more dominant main stems — evolved long before anyone thought to breed for them deliberately.

The Oldest Mystery in Agriculture

Scholars have argued for decades about what, exactly, turned wild grasses into crops. The debate isn't trivial — it cuts to the heart of how human civilisation got started. One camp says farmers made conscious choices: they selected bigger seeds, kept the best plants, discarded the rest. The other camp says most of it happened by accident, a slow coevolutionary drift between people and plants neither party fully controlled. The truth is probably somewhere between the two, and that uncomfortable middle ground is exactly where this new research lands. What Yixiang Shan, Colin Osborne, and their collaborators at Sheffield, Madrid, and Wageningen set out to test is whether competition — plants fighting each other for light in dense cultivated stands — was a hidden engine driving domestication all along.

What Is the Domestication Syndrome? Domestication syndrome describes the cluster of traits that repeatedly appeared in crop plants as humans began cultivating them: larger seeds, reduced seed shattering, less dormancy, and altered branching patterns. The fact that these traits evolved convergently — across unrelated species, on different continents — suggests shared evolutionary pressures, though which pressures, exactly, has long been disputed.

Why Previous Explanations Left Gaps

The competition hypothesis has been floating around in various forms since the 1970s. The logic goes roughly like this: early cultivated fields were dense, genetically mixed patches of plants; individuals that grew faster and grabbed more light produced more seeds; those seeds made it into next year's crop. Natural selection doing what natural selection does. But proving it is harder than proposing it. Previous work focused almost entirely on seed size — unconscious selection for larger seeds as an unintended byproduct of harvesting the biggest plants. Vegetative traits — how the plant's leaves and stems actually grow and compete during the growing season — got much less attention. That's the gap this study goes after. The team ran real greenhouse competition experiments and then fed the results into a functional-structural plant (FSP) model — a 3D computer simulation that grows virtual wheat plants and measures their simulated fights for light.

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3
independent wheat domestication events tested
32
wheat accessions in the intraspecific experiment
933
plants/m² maximum density tested in pots

How Did Wheat Actually Get More Competitive?

Here's the part that surprised even the authors. Across all three independent wheat domestication events — emmer, einkorn, and Timopheev's wheat — early landraces consistently beat their wild progenitors in head-to-head biomass competition. Every single one. And the gap widened as plant density increased, which is exactly what you'd predict if natural selection were doing the work. The key trait, across all three lineages, was leaf insertion angle. Domesticated wheats developed steeper, more erect leaves. That might sound mundane, but it turns out to be a powerfully effective way to overtop neighbours and intercept more light at high densities — though only when paired with large leaves, which the model revealed as an unexpected interaction nobody had predicted going in. Larger potential leaf biomass and greater apical dominance (suppression of side shoots in favour of the main stem) were also important, though these varied more between species. The 3D simulations reproduced the experimental results without any difference in seed size being required — which means seedling competition doesn't explain everything. Competition among established plants, during vegetative growth, is sufficient.

"Real and virtual experiments indicate that competition caused convergent trait evolution during wheat domestication, leading to landrace phenotypes unsuitable for modern conventional agriculture."

— Shan, Osborne et al. · University of Sheffield · Current Biology, 2026

What This Changes for Crop Breeding

There's an irony buried in these findings that's worth sitting with. The traits that made early landrace wheats such fierce competitors — large, steep leaves, robust vegetative growth — turned out to be exactly the traits that modern breeding programmes spent the 20th century trying to eliminate. The Green Revolution of the 1960s was built on shorter plants with smaller, more upright leaves, varieties that channel energy into grain rather than competing with their neighbours. Norman Borlaug's famous semi-dwarf wheats were, in effect, the anti-landrace. The study's intraspecific experiment traces this arc explicitly, comparing wild emmer, early emmer landraces, late durum landraces, and modern improved durum varieties. Early landraces were the strongest competitors. Modern varieties were weakest — though, tellingly, they still outcompeted the wild forms. Ten thousand years of selection pressure doesn't just disappear because a plant breeder in the 1950s started crossing for yield.

~10,000
years since wheat domestication began
8,500 yrs BP
emmer wheat fully domesticated (non-shattering)
4
domestication stages compared in intraspecific test
The Green Revolution Reversal Agronomist C.M. Donald argued in 1968 that maximum crop yield required weak competitors — plants that don't waste biomass jostling for light in genetically uniform fields. Modern elite wheat varieties were bred toward that ideal. This new research shows the exact opposite trajectory played out during domestication: competition selected for tougher, more aggressive vegetative phenotypes that modern agriculture then had to undo.

The Questions Still Unanswered

The study is careful about what it doesn't prove. The greenhouse competition experiments used single accessions per species in the interspecific trial — a practical necessity, but it means individual plant variability within each species isn't fully captured. The model also doesn't simulate root competition or nutrient dynamics, focusing only on aboveground light interception; the team argues this is justified because wild wheats were always the weaker competitors even in nutrient-rich conditions, but root-soil dynamics might tell a more complicated story in actual Neolithic fields. The genetics of these competitive traits remain largely unmapped. Leaf insertion angle is regulated by auxin and brassinosteroid signalling in cereals, and the key traits are probably highly polygenic — likely meaning evolution took different genetic routes in each wheat lineage, even arriving at similar phenotypes. Identifying those routes, using existing wild-domesticated mapping populations, is a natural next step that could eventually tell breeders which genetic levers to pull if they want to restore — or deliberately design — competitive ability in modern varieties.

  • Competition drove domestication — Across three independent wheat lineages, early landraces became stronger competitors than wild relatives, with the gap growing at higher plant densities — exactly the pattern natural selection would produce.
  • Leaves, not seeds, did the work — Steeper leaf angles and larger leaf canopies were the dominant competitive traits, suggesting established-plant competition mattered as much as seedling competition during domestication.
  • Modern breeding reversed the trend — Elite 20th-century wheat varieties are weaker competitors than their landrace ancestors, a deliberate trade-off for yield in uniform monocultures — though they still beat wild wheats in a straight fight.

"The work provides empirical evidence for natural selection or indirect selection as mechanisms responsible for competition-related vegetative traits in wheat." — Shan, Gómez-Fernández, Evers et al., Current Biology, 2026.


📄 Source & Citation

Primary Source: Shan Y, Gómez-Fernández A, Evers J, Freckleton RP, Jones GEM, Milla R, Osborne CP. (2026). Evolution of competitiveness during wheat domestication. Current Biology, 36(5), 1329–1338.e4. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2026.01.061

Authors & Affiliations: Yixiang Shan, Glynis E.M. Jones, Colin P. Osborne, Robert P. Freckleton (University of Sheffield, UK); Alicia Gómez-Fernández, Ruben Milla (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid & Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Spain); Jochem Evers (Wageningen University, The Netherlands)

Data & Code: Experimental and modelling data: Mendeley Data DOI:10.17632/dpwyyvt66j.1. FSP model code: https://git.wur.nl/jochemevers1/FSPM_BASIC. Analysis code: available from lead contact ([email protected]).

Key Themes: Wheat Domestication · Plant Competition · Crop Evolution · Functional-Structural Plant Modelling · Domestication Syndrome

Supporting References:

[1] Kluyver TA et al. (2017). Unconscious selection drove seed enlargement in vegetable crops. Evolution Letters, 1(2):64–72. https://doi.org/10.1002/evl3.6

[2] Fuller DQ, Denham T, Allaby R. (2023). Plant domestication and agricultural ecologies. Current Biology, 33(13):R636–R649. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.04.038

[3] Preece C, Jones G, Rees M, Osborne CP. (2021). Fertile Crescent crop progenitors gained a competitive advantage from large seedlings. Ecology and Evolution, 11(6):3300–3312. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7282

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