A wild bunch of almonds

Never rains but it pours. Along very similar lines as the previous post on a fun effort to document people’s favourite breadfruit varieties, here comes the FruitDev project’s Wild Fruit Population of the Month.

Each month, the series highlights one (or more) populations identified by a FRUITDIV partner, illustrating how field exploration, local knowledge, and cross-partner collaboration contribute to a better understanding of wild fruit genetic resources.

By focusing on individual populations, the series aims to make visible the often-overlooked genetic diversity found in natural and semi-natural landscapes, many of which are shaped by environmental pressures such as drought, poor soils, or past disturbances. These populations represent valuable reservoirs of adaptive traits that are increasingly relevant for resilience, conservation, and future breeding strategies.

This month’s featured population is a dwarf almond from North Macedonia. Nice idea.

Stairway to maize diversity

There’s a nice article in Rising Kashmir highlighting that region’s cold-tolerant maize landraces as a unique source of genetic diversity. What I liked about it is that it doesn’t condescend to its audience. It’s unapologetically technical and niche, while successfully (I think) striving to be understood by all. That’s rare. The author, Dr Salika Ramazan, argues that long adaptation to Himalayan environments has produced valuable traits for climate resilience and future maize breeding, and advocates for urgent conservation before this irreplaceable diversity is lost.

A quick search on Genesys revealed 302 maize accessions from above 1500 masl in the Himalayas (yellow on the map below), and 62 above 2500 masl (red). Of course, there are many more maize accessions from high altitudes in Central and South America, but their photoperiod adaptation (among other things) is likely to be quite different.

Distribution of high-altitude maize accessions in the Himalayas (from Genesys).

Brainfood: Markets edition

Brainfood: Indigenous edition