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IVES 9 IVES Conference Series 9 Grapevine Breeding and Genetics 9 Grapevine Breeding and Genetics 2026 9 GBG 2026 – Session 1: Genetic resources 9 Archaeogenomics reveals few generations separating ancient Eastern Mediterranean and modern Iberian grapevines over three millennia of viticulture

Archaeogenomics reveals few generations separating ancient Eastern Mediterranean and modern Iberian grapevines over three millennia of viticulture

Abstract

Viticulture became central to most western Mediterranean civilisations only a few millennia after grapevine (Vitis vinifera L.) was domesticated in the South Caucasus and the Near East. To elucidate the origins of the grapevines that enabled this westward spread over the past 3,000 years, we analysed 28 grapevine seeds from seven archaeological sites in the Iberian Peninsula and Sardinia. Ancient DNAanalyses from the oldest seeds with domesticated-like morphology (ca.1,000 BCE) found in southwestern Spain showed nuclear and chloroplast genome signatures of Eastern Mediterranean cultivars. In contrast, seeds from the same and later Iron Age Iberian sites exhibited signatures of hybridisation between local wild grapevines and eastern cultivars. Ancestry analyses of Sardinian and northeastern Spanish seeds suggest that historical diversification processes differentiating Central European and Iberian wine genetic groups likely occurred already in the early Iron Age. In Iberia, Roman-period seeds were inferred as first-degree relatives of both the earliest eastern-introduced domesticates and a Medieval seed whose genetic profile matches that of the extant Iberian variety ‘Pasa Valenciana’. Another Medieval seed was predicted as the offspring of the prolific Iberian cultivar ‘Hebén’, supporting that this major founder of the Iberian germplasm has been continuously propagated for over 1,100 years. These results indicate that Western Mediterranean viticulture likely began with Phoenician settlers who introduced eastern domesticated grapevines. Early hybridisation with local Iberian wild grapevines could have facilitated adaptation to the new environment. Through only a few sexual generations, followed by long-term reliance on clonal propagation, these early introductions laid the foundation for a lineage of modern Iberian cultivars.

Acknowledgements

We thank T. A. Brown, H. R. Oliveira, N. Wales, R. Schwab, V. Laucou for assistance and discussions; E. Rodrigo and J. Pera for archaeological materials; K. L. Krettek for experimental support; and the IT team of the MPI for Biology and ICVV. This work was supported from the Leibniz Science Campus GACT (Project number: W73/2022); the Max-Planck Society; and by the projects CIDEGENT/2019/003 funded by Generalitat Valenciana; PID2021-127936NB-I00, PID2024-160446NB-100, PIB2023-148979NB-I00, PID2020-120183RB-I00 and PID2023-152513OB-I0 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and by ERDF/EU; ERC-AdG2021-101054883 funded by the European Research Council; CLT009/22/000057 funded by Generalitat de Catalunya; ANR-22-CE27-0026 funded by the Agence Nationale de la Recherche; COST Action CA1711 Integrape; and RYC2022-037758-I funded by MCIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and the ESF+.

Publication date: June 22, 2026

Issue: GBG 2026

Type: Oral

Authors

Guillem Pérez-Jordà1, Leonor Peña-Chocarro2, Konstantina Drosou3,4, Javier Tello5, Laurent Bouby6, Vincent Bonhomme6, Natàlia Alonso7, Javier Ibáñez5, Cosimo Posth8,9, Detlef Weigel10,11, José Miguel Martínez-Zapater5, Pablo Carbonell-Bejerano5, Carolina Royo5,*

1 Departament de Prehistòria, Arqueologia i Història Antiga, Universitat de València, Valencia, 46008 Spain

2 GI Paleoeconomía y Subsistencia de las Sociedades Preindustriales, Instituto de Historia (CSIC), Madrid, E-28030 Spain

3 Division of Cell Matrix Biology and Regenerative Medicine, University of Manchester, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK

4 School of Health and Medical Sciences, Tooting Campus City St George’s, University of London Cranmer Terrace, London SW17 0RE

5 Instituto de Ciencias de la Vid y del Vino, ICVV, CSIC-Universidad de La Rioja-Gobierno de La Rioja, Logroño 26007, Spain

6 ISEM, University of Montpellier, CNRS-IRD-EPHE, Montpellier 34090, France

7 GIP (ARQHISTEC-GIP), Department of Geography, History and History of Art, INDEST, Universitat de Lleida, Lleida 25003, Spain

8 Archaeo- and Palaeogenetics, Institute for Archaeological Sciences, Department of Geosciences, University of Tübingen, Tübingen 72074, Germany

9 Senckenberg Centre for Human Evolution and Palaeoenvironment at the University of Tübingen, Tübingen 72074, Germany

10 Department of Molecular Biology, Max Planck Institute for Biology Tübingen, Tübingen 72076, Germany

11 Institute for Bioinformatics and Medical Informatics, University of Tübingen, 72076 Tübingen, Germany

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Keywords

grapevine domestication, ancient DNA, Iberian viticulture, hybridisation

Tags

GBG | GBG 2026 | IVES Conference Series

Citation

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