PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Greenhouse 'time machine' sheds light on corn domestication

2014-02-03
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Beth King
kingb@si.edu
202-633-4700 x28216
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
Greenhouse 'time machine' sheds light on corn domestication

By simulating the environment when corn was first exploited by people and then domesticated, Smithsonian scientists discovered that corn's ancestor; a wild grass called teosinte, may have looked more like corn then than it does today. The fact that it looked more like corn under past conditions may help to explain how teosinte came to be selected by early farmers who turned it into one of the most important staple crops in the world.

The vegetative and flowering structures of modern teosinte are very different from those of corn. These and other differences led to a century-long dispute as to whether teosinte could really be the ancestor of corn.

But new findings reported in the journal Quaternary International show that teosinte may have looked very different in the past. "We grew teosinte in the conditions that it encountered 10,000 years ago during the early Holocene period: temperatures 2–3 degrees Celsius cooler than today's with atmospheric carbon dioxide levels at around 260 parts per million," said Dolores Piperno, senior scientist and curator of archaeobotany and South American archaeology at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, who led the project. "Intriguingly, the teosinte plants grown under past conditions exhibit characteristics more like corn; a single main stem topped by a single tassle, a few, very short branches tipped by female ears and synchronous seed maturation.

After the Industrial Revolution, carbon dioxide rose to today's 405 parts per million, the level in the control chamber where teosinte plants look like plants in the wild today—tall, with many long branches tipped by tassels and seed maturation taking place over a period of a few months. Co-author Klaus Winter usually studies the effects of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide levels on tropical plants as a senior staff scientist at STRI. Piperno and Winter devised a scheme to essentially travel back in time by comparing plants grown in modern conditions with plants grown in the early Holocene chamber.

"Now it appears to be an open question when in the Holocene teosinte became the plant very distinctive from maize in vegetative architecture and inflorescence sexuality that we see today and use as the baseline for research on maize domestication," said Piperno. "When humans first began to cultivate teosinte about 10,000 years ago, it was probably more maize-like—naturally exhibiting some characteristics previously thought to result from human selection and domestication. The environment may have played a significant, if serendipitous, role in the transition through inducing phenotypic plasticity that gave early farmers a head start."

Phenotypic plasticity is an organism's ability to change in response to the environment, causing genetically identical organisms to look very different when they live in different conditions. As they formulate a "new modern evolutionary synthesis," in part with concepts that Darwin could not have known of, evolutionary biologists continue to debate the importance of the environment and plasticity on evolutionary change and the origins of the diverse forms of life on Earth today. However, new evidence shows that these environmental–phenotypic interactions are in a growing number of organisms. This is one of the first studies to examine the influence of these processes on plant domestication.

"Extending these concepts to domestication research allows anthropologists to become more fully engaged in modern evolutionary theory and practice," Piperno said.



INFORMATION:



The Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, headquartered in Panama City, Panama, is a unit of the Smithsonian Institution. The Institute furthers the understanding of tropical nature and its importance to human welfare, trains students to conduct research in the tropics and promotes conservation by increasing public awareness of the beauty and importance of tropical ecosystems. Website: http://www.stri.si.edu.

Piperno, D.R., et al., Teosinte before domestication: Experimental study of growth and phenotypic variability in Late Pleistocene and early Holocene environments. Quaternary International (2014). http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S104061821300983X Copies of this paper are available to credentialed journalists upon request; please contact Elsevier's Newsroom at newsroom@elsevier.com or +31 20 4853564.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Two papers unraveled the mystery of sex determination and benthic adaptation of the flatfish

2014-02-03
February 2, 2014, Shenzhen, China - Researchers from Yellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fisheries Sciences, BGI-Shenzhen and other institutes have successfully decoded the first ...

Capturing ultrasharp images of multiple cell components at once

2014-02-03
BOSTON -- A new microscopy method could ...

Nature can, selectively, buffer human-caused global warming

2014-02-03
Jerusalem, February 2, 2014 – Can naturally occurring processes selectively buffer the full brunt of global warming caused by greenhouse gas emissions resulting ...

JCI early table of contents for Feb. 3, 2014

2014-02-03
Methylation signature correlates with acute myeloid leukemia survival Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is characterized by the inappropriate replacement of normal bone marrow with white blood cells due to dysfunctional ...

Can a protein controlling blood pressure enhance immune responses and prevent Alzheimer's?

2014-02-03
LOS ANGELES (EMBARGOED UNTIL 12 ...

NSAIDs do not increase risk of miscarriages: Study

2014-02-03
Women who take nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) during pregnancy are not at increased risk of miscarriages, confirms a new study published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association ...

New guideline recommends delaying dialysis for chronic kidney disease

2014-02-03
For asymptomatic adults with chronic kidney disease who will need dialysis, an intent-to-defer approach is recommended over an ...

Chemical stem cell signature predicts treatment response for acute myeloid leukemia

2014-02-03
February 3, 2014 — (Bronx, NY) — Researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University and Montefiore Medical Center have found a chemical "signature" ...

Study finds intervention leads to reduction of C-sections and neonatal morbidities

2014-02-03
In a study to be presented on Feb. 6 in an oral plenary session at 8 a.m. CST, at the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine's annual meeting, The Pregnancy Meeting™, in ...

Study's results encourage expectant monitoring for women with hypertension

2014-02-03
In a study to be presented on Feb. 6 at 8:15 a.m. CST, at the Society for Maternal-Fetal ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Heart valve developed at UC Irvine shines in early-stage preclinical testing

In diseases due to exposure to toxic particles like gout, macrophages elicit separate pathways for inflammation and lysosomal function

Zoning out could be beneficial—and may actually help us learn faster

Weekly semaglutide improves blood sugar and weight in adults with Type 1 diabetes

Concerned father, statistician develops software to improve skills therapy

Your smartwatch might know you’re sick before you do — and it might help stop pandemics

ImmunoPET tracer enhances early detection of liver cancer

AI-based brain-mapping software receives FDA market authorization

New PET tracer identifies diverse invasive mold infections behind life-threatening illnesses in cancer and transplant patients

Current Pharmaceutical Analysis (CPA) achieves notable impact factor growth in latest journal citation reports

AI chatbot safeguards fail to prevent spread of health disinformation

UTIA researcher to receive award from the Soil and Water Conservation Society

HSE linguists study how bilinguals use phrases with numerals in Russian

Cold winters halt the northward spread of species in a warming climate

Study finds early signs of widespread coastal marsh decline

Massive burps of carbon dioxide led to oxygen-less ocean environments in the deep past

US muslims’ attitudes toward psychedelic therapy

HSE scientists reveal how staying at alma mater can affect early-career researchers

Durham University scientists reveal new cosmic insights as first Rubin Observatory images released

Emotional and directional enabled programmable flexible haptic interface for enhanced cognition in disabled community

Music on the brain: exploring how songs boost memory

Non-contact and nanometer-scale measurement of shallow PN junction depth buried in Si wafers

A unified approach to first principles calculations of Parton physics in hadrons

Killer whales groom each other using tools made from kelp

Killer whales make seaweed ‘tools’ to scratch each other’s backs

New drug for diabetes and obesity shows promising results

Role of sleep and white matter in the link between screen time and depression in childhood and early adolescence

U.S. neonatal mortality from perinatal causes

Discovery suggests new avenue for repairing brain function

Teen depression? Study finds clues in screen use and sleep quality

[Press-News.org] Greenhouse 'time machine' sheds light on corn domestication