Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations  

International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture

Evolutionary and food supply implications of ongoing maize domestication by Mexican campesinos

Maize evolution under domestication is a process that continues today. Case studies suggest that Mexican smallholder family farmers, known as campesinos, contribute importantly to this, but their significance has not been explicitly quantified and analysed as a whole. Here, the authors examine the evolutionary and food security implications of the scale and scope under which campesinos produce maize. They gathered official municipal-level data on maize production under rainfed conditions and identified campesino agriculture as occurring in municipalities. Environmental conditions vary widely in those municipalities and are associated with a great diversity of maize races, representing 85.3% of native maize samples collected in the country. They estimate that in those municipalities, around 1.38 1011 genetically different individual plants are subjected to evolution under domestication each season. This implies that 5.24 108 mother plants contribute to the next generation with their standing genetic diversity and rare alleles. Such a large breeding population size also increases the total number of adaptive mutations that may appear and be selected for. The authors also estimate that campesino agriculture could potentially feed around 54.7 million people in Mexico. These analyses provide insights about the contributions of smallholder agriculture around the world.
ThemeTechnical Resources
SubjectRecognition schemes for farmers
PublisherThe Royal Society
Publication year2018
RegionsLatin America and the Caribbean
LanguagesEnglish
Resource typePublications
Resource linkhttps://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rspb.2018.1049
KeywordsPlant breeding; Recognition of the role of farmers; Food security; Agricultural biodiversity