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AOBPreview originally published online on July 25, 2007
Annals of Botany 2007 100(5):1101-1115; doi:10.1093/aob/mcm126
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© 2007 The Author(s)
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

In situ Management and Domestication of Plants in Mesoamerica

Alejandro Casas*, Adriana Otero-Arnaiz, Edgar Pérez-Negrón and Alfonso Valiente-Banuet

Centro de Investigaciones en Ecosistemas, UNAM. Apartado Postal 27-3 (Santa María de Guido), Morelia, Michoacán 58190, Mexico

* For correspondence. E-mail acasas{at}oikos.unam.mx

Received: 29 September 2006    Returned for revision: 22 January 2007    Accepted: 22 May 2007    Published electronically: 25 July 2007

Background and Aims: Ethnobotanical studies in Mexico have documented that Mesoamerican peoples practise systems of in situ management of wild and weedy vegetation directed to control availability of useful plants. In situ management includes let standing, encouraging growing and protection of individual plants of useful species during clearance of vegetation, which in some cases may involve artificial selection. The aim of this study was to review, complement and re-analyse information from three case studies which examined patterns of morphological, physiological and genetic effects of artificial selection in plant populations under in situ management in the region.

Methods: Information on wild and in situ managed populations of the herbaceous weedy plants Anoda cristata and Crotalaria pumila, the tree Leucaena esculenta subsp. esculenta and the columnar cacti Escontria chiotilla, Polaskia chichipe and Stenocereus stellatus from Central Mexico was re-analysed. Analyses compared morphology and frequency of morphological variants, germination patterns, and population genetics parameters between wild and managed in situ populations of the species studied. Species of columnar cacti are under different management intensities and their populations, including cultivated stands of P. chichipe and S. stellatus, were also compared between species.

Key Results: Significant differences in morphology, germination patterns and genetic variation documented between wild, in situ managed and cultivated populations of the species studied are associated with higher frequencies of phenotypes favoured by humans in managed populations. Genetic diversity in managed populations of E. chiotilla and P. chichipe is slightly lower than in wild populations but in managed populations of S. stellatus variation was higher than in the wild. However, genetic distance between populations was generally small and influenced more by geographic distance than by management.

Conclusions: Artificial selection operating on in situ managed populations of the species analysed is causing incipient domestication. This process could be acting on any of the 600–700 plant species documented to be under in situ management in Mesoamerica. In situ domestication of plants could be relevant to understand early processes of domestication and current conditions of in situ conservation of plant genetic resources.

Key words: Anoda cristata, Crotalaria pumila, domestication, Escontria chiotilla, in situ management, Leucaena esculenta, Mesoamerica, Polaskia chichipe, Stenocereus stellatus


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