BIO 131 Lecture 12: Seeds for Agriculture

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Through selection and breeding over many thousands of years, farmers developed locally-adapted crop varieties for their own use: locally adapted plants grew well with the local microorganisms, soil ph level, fungi, etc. For example, there are many (close to 60) recognized landraces of corn in. Mexico: here, there is generally only 1 type of recognized gmo corn, landraces = heirloom. Landraces gave way to many heirloom varieties of plants. In the old days, there was broad involvement in agriculture and saving seeds everyone was involved. History: in the old days people didn"t patent plants b/c plants were natural. Realizing there was money to be made, seed companies tried to get patents for plant varieties as early as 1885. Now they could package seeds and sell them to make 30001 (example: sunflower seeds) But nothing really happened until the 30"s. Congress passed the plant patent act of 1930, allowing patenting of asexually propagated plants (cuttings, rootings, etc. )

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