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Hybridization of maize and teosinte, in Mexico and Guatemala and the improvement of maize.

By: Material type: ArticleLanguage: English Publication details: USA : The New York Botanical Garden Press : Springer, 1977.ISSN:
  • 0013-0001
Subject(s): In: Economic Botany USA : The New York Botanical Garden Press : Springer, 1977. v. 31, no. 3, p. 254-293605027, 613312Summary: The recognition and subsequent detection of the importance of teosinte introgression in the racial diversity and heterotic gene architecture of maize has been one of the outstanding achievements of Paul C. Mangelsdorf’s investigations into the origin of maize. This paper documents three areas in Mexico and Guatemala where maize and teosinte hybridize and where there is a system by which native cultivators exploit the heterotic nature of maize to increase their harvest. There is little reason to doubt that the hybridization and subsequent introgression of teosinte genes into maize observed at these sites is changed from that which has occurred over the past three thousand years resulting in the tremendous diversity and pronounced hybrid vigor in maize.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Barcode
Article CIMMYT Knowledge Center: John Woolston Library CIMMYT Staff Publications Collection CIS-4475 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 605027
Article CIMMYT Knowledge Center: John Woolston Library CIMMYT Staff Publications Collection CIS-4475 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 2 Available 613312
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The recognition and subsequent detection of the importance of teosinte introgression in the racial diversity and heterotic gene architecture of maize has been one of the outstanding achievements of Paul C. Mangelsdorf’s investigations into the origin of maize. This paper documents three areas in Mexico and Guatemala where maize and teosinte hybridize and where there is a system by which native cultivators exploit the heterotic nature of maize to increase their harvest. There is little reason to doubt that the hybridization and subsequent introgression of teosinte genes into maize observed at these sites is changed from that which has occurred over the past three thousand years resulting in the tremendous diversity and pronounced hybrid vigor in maize.

Text in English

6135-R|Springer|3

CIMMYT Staff Publications Collection

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