Mapping the diversity of maize races in Mexico

Traditional landraces of maize are cultivated throughout more than one-half of Mexico's cropland. Efforts to organize in situ conservation of this important genetic resource have been limited by the lack of knowledge of regional diversity patterns. We used recent and historic collections of maize classified for race type to determine biogeographic regions and centers of landrace diversity. We also analyzed how diversity has changed over the last sixty years. Based on racial composition of maize we found that Mexico can be divided into 11 biogeographic regions. Six of these biogeographic regions are in the center and west of the country and contain more than 90% of the reported samples for 38 of the 47 races studied; these six regions are also the most diverse. We found no evidence of rapid overall decline in landrace diversity for this period. However, several races are now less frequently reported and two regions seem to support lower diversity than in previous collection periods. Our results are consistent with a previous hypothesis for diversification centers and for migration routes of original maize populations merging in western central Mexico. We provide maps of regional diversity patterns and landrace based biogeographic regions that may guide efforts to conserve maize genetic resources.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Perales Rivera, Hugo Rafael Doctor autor/a 8273, Golicher, Duncan John Doctor autor/a 7182
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Maíz, Variedades del maíz, Conservación de los recursos genéticos, Biogeografía,
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4259470/pdf/pone.0114657.pdf
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:6115
record_format koha
spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:61152024-03-12T13:02:29ZMapping the diversity of maize races in Mexico Perales Rivera, Hugo Rafael Doctor autor/a 8273 Golicher, Duncan John Doctor autor/a 7182 textengTraditional landraces of maize are cultivated throughout more than one-half of Mexico's cropland. Efforts to organize in situ conservation of this important genetic resource have been limited by the lack of knowledge of regional diversity patterns. We used recent and historic collections of maize classified for race type to determine biogeographic regions and centers of landrace diversity. We also analyzed how diversity has changed over the last sixty years. Based on racial composition of maize we found that Mexico can be divided into 11 biogeographic regions. Six of these biogeographic regions are in the center and west of the country and contain more than 90% of the reported samples for 38 of the 47 races studied; these six regions are also the most diverse. We found no evidence of rapid overall decline in landrace diversity for this period. However, several races are now less frequently reported and two regions seem to support lower diversity than in previous collection periods. Our results are consistent with a previous hypothesis for diversification centers and for migration routes of original maize populations merging in western central Mexico. We provide maps of regional diversity patterns and landrace based biogeographic regions that may guide efforts to conserve maize genetic resources.Traditional landraces of maize are cultivated throughout more than one-half of Mexico's cropland. Efforts to organize in situ conservation of this important genetic resource have been limited by the lack of knowledge of regional diversity patterns. We used recent and historic collections of maize classified for race type to determine biogeographic regions and centers of landrace diversity. We also analyzed how diversity has changed over the last sixty years. Based on racial composition of maize we found that Mexico can be divided into 11 biogeographic regions. Six of these biogeographic regions are in the center and west of the country and contain more than 90% of the reported samples for 38 of the 47 races studied; these six regions are also the most diverse. We found no evidence of rapid overall decline in landrace diversity for this period. However, several races are now less frequently reported and two regions seem to support lower diversity than in previous collection periods. Our results are consistent with a previous hypothesis for diversification centers and for migration routes of original maize populations merging in western central Mexico. We provide maps of regional diversity patterns and landrace based biogeographic regions that may guide efforts to conserve maize genetic resources.Adobe Acrobat profesional 6.0 o superiorMaízVariedades del maízConservación de los recursos genéticosBiogeografíaDisponible en líneaPLoS ONEhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4259470/pdf/pone.0114657.pdfAcceso en línea sin restricciones
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Maíz
Variedades del maíz
Conservación de los recursos genéticos
Biogeografía
Maíz
Variedades del maíz
Conservación de los recursos genéticos
Biogeografía
spellingShingle Maíz
Variedades del maíz
Conservación de los recursos genéticos
Biogeografía
Maíz
Variedades del maíz
Conservación de los recursos genéticos
Biogeografía
Perales Rivera, Hugo Rafael Doctor autor/a 8273
Golicher, Duncan John Doctor autor/a 7182
Mapping the diversity of maize races in Mexico
description Traditional landraces of maize are cultivated throughout more than one-half of Mexico's cropland. Efforts to organize in situ conservation of this important genetic resource have been limited by the lack of knowledge of regional diversity patterns. We used recent and historic collections of maize classified for race type to determine biogeographic regions and centers of landrace diversity. We also analyzed how diversity has changed over the last sixty years. Based on racial composition of maize we found that Mexico can be divided into 11 biogeographic regions. Six of these biogeographic regions are in the center and west of the country and contain more than 90% of the reported samples for 38 of the 47 races studied; these six regions are also the most diverse. We found no evidence of rapid overall decline in landrace diversity for this period. However, several races are now less frequently reported and two regions seem to support lower diversity than in previous collection periods. Our results are consistent with a previous hypothesis for diversification centers and for migration routes of original maize populations merging in western central Mexico. We provide maps of regional diversity patterns and landrace based biogeographic regions that may guide efforts to conserve maize genetic resources.
format Texto
topic_facet Maíz
Variedades del maíz
Conservación de los recursos genéticos
Biogeografía
author Perales Rivera, Hugo Rafael Doctor autor/a 8273
Golicher, Duncan John Doctor autor/a 7182
author_facet Perales Rivera, Hugo Rafael Doctor autor/a 8273
Golicher, Duncan John Doctor autor/a 7182
author_sort Perales Rivera, Hugo Rafael Doctor autor/a 8273
title Mapping the diversity of maize races in Mexico
title_short Mapping the diversity of maize races in Mexico
title_full Mapping the diversity of maize races in Mexico
title_fullStr Mapping the diversity of maize races in Mexico
title_full_unstemmed Mapping the diversity of maize races in Mexico
title_sort mapping the diversity of maize races in mexico
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4259470/pdf/pone.0114657.pdf
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