id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-009703-ampqjbqw Chacón‐Labella, Julia Plant domestication disrupts biodiversity effects across major crop types 2019-07-03 .txt text/plain 6478 333 46 We tested whether domestication has changed the potential of crop mixtures to over‐yield by comparing the performance and traits of major crop species and those of their wild progenitors under varying levels of diversity. wild progenitors and across diversity levels We compared the performance of wild and domesticated plant species mixtures using mixed effects models with residual maximum likelihood estimation. For this purpose, we used the mean relative differences for a given trait in mixture pots as a response variable, using the same mixed model as the one employed for explaining the biodiversity effects (NE, CE and SE) in crops vs. The effects of species richness (P = 0.051) and functional group richness (P = 0.021) on SE were positive in both mixtures of crops and wild progenitors (Fig. 2f , g; Table 2 ). Although wild progenitors showed higher net biodiversity effects than crops, we show that both domestication statuses over-yielded in mixtures. ./cache/cord-009703-ampqjbqw.txt ./txt/cord-009703-ampqjbqw.txt