flowerbug
Garden Master
Yes, wouldn’t that be wonderful. Perhaps eventually DNA testing will become more available and origins and development of varieties will be at our fingertips! A little time to wait though, I imagine!
it surely would be interesting. i can pick two i would start with, the Red Lima bean and Montezuma Red along with several of the mountain varieties from a few places in Mexico and the other parts of South America where beans may have originated. they've probably already done some of those sequences anyways.
well here is some interesting reading for a morning cup of coffee. i sure don't know what many of the terms used mean or the abbreviations but it is still interesting to read through.
A reference genome for common bean and genome-wide analysis of dual domestications - Nature Genetics
Scott Jackson, Jeremy Schmutz, Phillip McClean and colleagues report the genome sequence of the common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) and resequenced wild individuals and landraces from Mesoamerican and Andean gene pools, showing that common bean underwent two independent domestications.
www.nature.com
this is another one worth reading through for various tidbits.
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