b'Exploring ideas and views on all aspects of the seed industry.ing beans and inrown together, newly examined lost crops could have produced uash, climbY AS MAIZE e winter sqAN s: th. G S M ter . The domesticated forms of the lost crops ED A ed three sisenough seed to feed as many indigenous people as traditionally grown maize. growingtheyonULD HAVE F storiPS CO e garden, youeology in LOST CRO th archaso , describes how she painstakingly grew and calculated yield estimates for two annual But there are no written or oral histories to describe themme roomprofessor of.the vegetable we know as corn Muellert, assista eithere intinc orth America for thousands of yearsand then abandonedMakent t. Ethnobiology, Natalieuctive thant crops,could are thought to be ex ofd togetherhh othere ters in Kentucky , the Journalis more prod known losand plants that were cultivated in eastern N an theonly. Overton UnWritinge wit t e5 yearsArts & Sciences and erec in t we dem,longrops in rock sh l the past 2 iversity, t knot agoosefootd. Plantedost c clues Washing al societies lGrowingr discovere evidence of were theireology atted loce Mu t that a previously unknown crop complex had supporn ,elle .the firstdried leavesa of archahave fed thousands f Seeditz, profalo lo tsound caches andessor emeritgisArchaeo 1930s.ayle Frin thearch by G er the for millennia before maize was adopted as a staple crop. a g . Arkansasg rese ndangpioneerin rea y e breeding helped to establish the fac tl may ofconcept diminution h to the EDV lead toapproac could possiblynarrow andDV The incentiveROW APPROACH TO EbreedingNAR GREATLYG T MAYEEDINforts. BANCONCEP R THE BR ternational ef R ENDANGE eIn i n of New DEAL FOR U o f o aINCENTIVE eeofotect o agreed to thFarmers could soon be growing tomatoes bunchedoxpE MATO I R SPACEn h fAommittfor the Pr V) hassentiallyA NEW TO D OUTE u t t e r o C c ention lants (UPO te on Es t should D NS AN i , o onvGAR n a st ragen hats if a clutch of newVarieties of P lanatory no ove tha eal of lik rap r eve osfruitful as the first batch. revisit the e rietiesa mgreat d g to es i pace. T is te g n in thi wesearchn beDerived Va lause, but a n, accordin seed yscraper, o m r s prove as ys ne r that ca notein app eds to happe the global sk n ited cropgoal ofof cropsr placesnd ne in e-ed yge he pri a er variet nts or othe Harborwork stills groups withUPOVs n T ne ba d env ro me ays Cold Springr Zachnumerou ar of inaction by ittee to er a wi i natog gi b i fornt grow an , s HHMI Investig industry. r a ye nd Legal Comm izations e n r thbou s the lab that designed the urbanAdmin p t is topic, UPOV a join ach to rownr plan s dnts loo Afte rative a these organ t letter, suita ley Profe sorkistratoLa mwho lead . -e ted tomato pla growingtake u hnarrow appro anger Lipp an, en di find.hetogether submitted to reatly endagriculture tomatoes i a uicultur npointing out that the fort seeg e vines yo mightal fields T may gin b n w ature is their bunched, compact fruit.the breeding incentive and could possibly The e longngr concept like e lead to a diminution of () breeding ef th rden orave bee the EDV nothing kyard ga e roses h aac whosmost notable fea bouquet. h This demonstrates how we can produce cropsresembl herry tomatoes lace , without having to tear up the land as T ey y ripe c nto d b ns off ireptilizer that ruin new ways d excessive fer .r ad , Lippman saysmuch orivers and streams66/ SEEDWORLD.COMFEBRUARY 2020'