Genetic and Phenotypic Consequences of Farmer Management of Feral Brassica rapa in Mexico
NYBG’s Alex McAlvay and colleagues published an article entitled “Genetic and phenotypic consequences of farmer management of feral Brassica rapa in Mexico” in the journal Etnobiología. The study investigates ongoing anthropogenic selection on introduced feral turnip (Brassica rapa) populations by Rarámuri people in northwestern Mexico as a model for understanding domestication processes. They find domestication-like shifts to flowering phenology and genetic differentiation. This short-generation, genome-enabled plant could provide a rare model for the study of domestication in real time.
(Etnobiología, September 2024
NYBG Contact: Alex McAlvey)