By analyzing ancient genomes of maize, scientists have found evidence suggesting that eventual agricultural use of the crop throughout the temperate highlands of the U.S. likely occurred due to propagation of varieties with earlier flowering times. Maize was first introduced to what is the modern-day U.S. via Mexico roughly 4,000 years ago.
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| Maize diversity from the Native Seeds/SEARCH collection [Credit: Native Seeds/SEARCH] |
They reconstructed and analyzed the genomes of 15 ancient samples of maize, comparing these data to a global collection of more than 2,500 modern lines.
By comparing the genetic information of the modern lines, the researchers were able to predict the flowering times of the ancient maize and traced the historical spread of phenotypes across various sites.
However, they found that the high-altitude varieties with slightly earlier flowering times -- which were more useful and appealing to farmers at these more northern locations -- probably did not come from what is modern-day Mexico; rather, the desirable phenotypes appear to be selected for by high-altitude farmers over thousands of years, the authors report.
The study is published in the journal Science.
Source: American Association for the Advancement of Science [August 03, 2017]






