Improving on excellence: achievements in breeding with the maize race Tuxpeño

One of the most graphic symbols of achievement in the CIMMYT Maize Program, oddly enough, is a downward drifting line, representing the dramatic reduction in plant height brought about in a population based on the Mexican landrace Tuxpeño. Why that particular accomplishment and that particular landrace should be assigned any special importance is a question we may well ask, considering that in the course of 20 years Center maize scientists have improved many diverse materials in exemplary, and sometimes astonishing, ways. The answer to that question lies only partly in Tuxpeño itself. It is, without doubt, one of the outstanding germplasm complexes identified in Latin America, being widely adapted and inherently superior in many other valued characteristics. More important, however, are the ways in which various Tuxpeño materials have been manipulated and the benefits that have accrued from that work. The reduction of plant height is but one example (arguably the most important so far) in which a breeding project involving Tuxpeño has given rise, not only to germplasm that is useful in many parts of the world, but to new insights into the art of improving the tropical maize plant. In that case and many others, Tuxpeño has proved to be the right germplasm at the right time. The question posed above, then, should perhaps be framed differently. Instead of wondering, "why give prominence to Tuxpeño?" we should ask, "how could one follow the story of maize improvement at CIMMYT without it?" Attempting to do so would be like reading a novel from which a principal character had vanished. One would be hard pressed either to follow the action or discern its meaning. This booklet is not, however, intended to be a complete or systematic account of the Maize Program but rather touches fairly briefly on several important dimensions of its work over the years. Among the aspects considered are the nature of the germplasm with which CIMMYT scientists embarked on their improvement program and some of the assumptions and decisions they made about their work, goals and priorities they set, methods they applied, and results they achieved. Tuxpeño naturally enters into all of the issues discussed here, and in fact, one very convenient way of examining them is to focus on the attributes and various uses of that germplasm. It is hoped that this discussion will shed light on the progress of the Maize Program to its current position and offer some indications as to its future course.

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Format: Brochure biblioteca
Language:English
Published: CIMMYT 1986
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, BREEDING METHODS, GENE POOLS, GERMPLASM, VARIETIES, ZEA MAYS, YIELDS, HYBRIDS,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10883/3591
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-35912023-12-22T16:41:28Z Improving on excellence: achievements in breeding with the maize race Tuxpeño AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY BREEDING METHODS GENE POOLS GERMPLASM VARIETIES ZEA MAYS YIELDS HYBRIDS One of the most graphic symbols of achievement in the CIMMYT Maize Program, oddly enough, is a downward drifting line, representing the dramatic reduction in plant height brought about in a population based on the Mexican landrace Tuxpeño. Why that particular accomplishment and that particular landrace should be assigned any special importance is a question we may well ask, considering that in the course of 20 years Center maize scientists have improved many diverse materials in exemplary, and sometimes astonishing, ways. The answer to that question lies only partly in Tuxpeño itself. It is, without doubt, one of the outstanding germplasm complexes identified in Latin America, being widely adapted and inherently superior in many other valued characteristics. More important, however, are the ways in which various Tuxpeño materials have been manipulated and the benefits that have accrued from that work. The reduction of plant height is but one example (arguably the most important so far) in which a breeding project involving Tuxpeño has given rise, not only to germplasm that is useful in many parts of the world, but to new insights into the art of improving the tropical maize plant. In that case and many others, Tuxpeño has proved to be the right germplasm at the right time. The question posed above, then, should perhaps be framed differently. Instead of wondering, "why give prominence to Tuxpeño?" we should ask, "how could one follow the story of maize improvement at CIMMYT without it?" Attempting to do so would be like reading a novel from which a principal character had vanished. One would be hard pressed either to follow the action or discern its meaning. This booklet is not, however, intended to be a complete or systematic account of the Maize Program but rather touches fairly briefly on several important dimensions of its work over the years. Among the aspects considered are the nature of the germplasm with which CIMMYT scientists embarked on their improvement program and some of the assumptions and decisions they made about their work, goals and priorities they set, methods they applied, and results they achieved. Tuxpeño naturally enters into all of the issues discussed here, and in fact, one very convenient way of examining them is to focus on the attributes and various uses of that germplasm. It is hoped that this discussion will shed light on the progress of the Maize Program to its current position and offer some indications as to its future course. 27 pages 2014-03-13T00:57:05Z 2014-03-13T00:57:05Z 1986 Brochure http://hdl.handle.net/10883/3591 English CIMMYT 20th Anniversary CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the suitable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF Mexico CIMMYT
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
BREEDING METHODS
GENE POOLS
GERMPLASM
VARIETIES
ZEA MAYS
YIELDS
HYBRIDS
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
BREEDING METHODS
GENE POOLS
GERMPLASM
VARIETIES
ZEA MAYS
YIELDS
HYBRIDS
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
BREEDING METHODS
GENE POOLS
GERMPLASM
VARIETIES
ZEA MAYS
YIELDS
HYBRIDS
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
BREEDING METHODS
GENE POOLS
GERMPLASM
VARIETIES
ZEA MAYS
YIELDS
HYBRIDS
Improving on excellence: achievements in breeding with the maize race Tuxpeño
description One of the most graphic symbols of achievement in the CIMMYT Maize Program, oddly enough, is a downward drifting line, representing the dramatic reduction in plant height brought about in a population based on the Mexican landrace Tuxpeño. Why that particular accomplishment and that particular landrace should be assigned any special importance is a question we may well ask, considering that in the course of 20 years Center maize scientists have improved many diverse materials in exemplary, and sometimes astonishing, ways. The answer to that question lies only partly in Tuxpeño itself. It is, without doubt, one of the outstanding germplasm complexes identified in Latin America, being widely adapted and inherently superior in many other valued characteristics. More important, however, are the ways in which various Tuxpeño materials have been manipulated and the benefits that have accrued from that work. The reduction of plant height is but one example (arguably the most important so far) in which a breeding project involving Tuxpeño has given rise, not only to germplasm that is useful in many parts of the world, but to new insights into the art of improving the tropical maize plant. In that case and many others, Tuxpeño has proved to be the right germplasm at the right time. The question posed above, then, should perhaps be framed differently. Instead of wondering, "why give prominence to Tuxpeño?" we should ask, "how could one follow the story of maize improvement at CIMMYT without it?" Attempting to do so would be like reading a novel from which a principal character had vanished. One would be hard pressed either to follow the action or discern its meaning. This booklet is not, however, intended to be a complete or systematic account of the Maize Program but rather touches fairly briefly on several important dimensions of its work over the years. Among the aspects considered are the nature of the germplasm with which CIMMYT scientists embarked on their improvement program and some of the assumptions and decisions they made about their work, goals and priorities they set, methods they applied, and results they achieved. Tuxpeño naturally enters into all of the issues discussed here, and in fact, one very convenient way of examining them is to focus on the attributes and various uses of that germplasm. It is hoped that this discussion will shed light on the progress of the Maize Program to its current position and offer some indications as to its future course.
format Brochure
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
BREEDING METHODS
GENE POOLS
GERMPLASM
VARIETIES
ZEA MAYS
YIELDS
HYBRIDS
title Improving on excellence: achievements in breeding with the maize race Tuxpeño
title_short Improving on excellence: achievements in breeding with the maize race Tuxpeño
title_full Improving on excellence: achievements in breeding with the maize race Tuxpeño
title_fullStr Improving on excellence: achievements in breeding with the maize race Tuxpeño
title_full_unstemmed Improving on excellence: achievements in breeding with the maize race Tuxpeño
title_sort improving on excellence: achievements in breeding with the maize race tuxpeño
publisher CIMMYT
publishDate 1986
url http://hdl.handle.net/10883/3591
_version_ 1787232870566199296