THE EVOLUTION OF CORN: Tracking the Ancestry of Corn Back 9,000 Years
It
is now growing season across the Corn Belt of the United States. Seeds
that have just been sown will, with the right mixture of sunshine and
rain, be knee-high plants by the Fourth of July and tall stalks with
ears ripe for picking by late August.
Corn
is much more than great summer picnic food, however. Civilization owes
much to this plant, and to the early people who first cultivated it.
For
most of human history, our ancestors relied entirely on hunting animals
and gathering seeds, fruits, nuts, tubers and other plant parts from
the wild for food. It was only about 10,000 years ago that humans in
many parts of the world began raising livestock and growing food through
deliberate planting. These advances provided more reliable sources of
food and allowed for larger, more permanent settlements. Native
Americans alone domesticated nine of the most important food crops in
the world, including corn, more properly called maize (Zea mays), which
now provides about 21 percent of human nutrition across the globe.
But
despite its abundance and importance, the biological origin of maize
has been a long-running mystery. The bright yellow, mouth-watering treat
we know so well does not grow in the wild anywhere on the planet, so
its ancestry was not at all obvious. Recently, however, the combined
detective work of botanists, geneticists and archeologists has been able
to identify the wild ancestor of maize, to pinpoint where the plant
originated, and to determine when early people were cultivating it and
using it in their diets.
The
greatest surprise, and the source of much past controversy in corn
archeology, was the identification of the ancestor of maize. Many
botanists did not see any connection between maize and other living
plants. Some concluded that the crop plant arose through the
domestication by early agriculturalists of a wild maize that was now
extinct, or at least undiscovered.
However,
a few scientists working during the first part of the 20th century
uncovered evidence that they believed linked maize to what, at first
glance, would seem to be a very unlikely parent, a Mexican grass called
teosinte. Looking at the skinny ears of teosinte, with just a dozen
kernels wrapped inside a stone-hard casing, it is hard to see how they
could be the forerunners of corn cobs with their many rows of juicy,
naked kernels. Indeed, teosinte was at first classified as a closer
relative of rice than of maize.
But George W. Beadle,
while a graduate student at Cornell University in the early 1930s,
found that maize and teosinte had very similar chromosomes. Moreover, he
made fertile hybrids between maize and teosinte that looked like
intermediates between the two plants. He even reported that he could get
teosinte kernels to pop. Dr. Beadle concluded that the two plants were
members of the same species, with maize being the domesticated form of
teosinte. Dr. Beadle went on to make other, more fundamental discoveries
in genetics for which he shared the Nobel Prize in 1958. He later became chancellor and president of the University of Chicago.
Despite
Dr. Beadle’s illustrious reputation, his theory still remained in doubt
three decades after he proposed it. The differences between the two
plants appeared to many scientists to be too great to have evolved in
just a few thousand years of domestication. So, after he formally
retired, Dr. Beadle returned to the issue and sought ways to gather more
evidence. As a great geneticist,
he knew that one way to examine the parentage of two individuals was to
cross them and then to cross their offspring and see how often the
parental forms appeared. He crossed maize and teosinte, then crossed the
hybrids, and grew 50,000 plants. He obtained plants that resembled
teosinte and maize at a frequency that indicated that just four or five
genes controlled the major differences between the two plants.
Dr. Beadle’s results showed that maize and teosinte were without any doubt remarkably and closely related. But to pinpoint the geographic origins of maize, more definitive forensic techniques were needed. This was DNA typing, exactly the same technology used by the courts to determine paternity.
In
order to trace maize’s paternity, botanists led by my colleague John
Doebley of the University of Wisconsin rounded up more than 60 samples
of teosinte from across its entire geographic range in the Western
Hemisphere and compared their DNA profile with all varieties of maize.
They discovered that all maize was genetically most similar to a
teosinte type from the tropical Central Balsas River Valley of southern
Mexico, suggesting that this region was the “cradle” of maize evolution.
Furthermore, by calculating the genetic distance between modern maize
and Balsas teosinte, they estimated that domestication occurred about
9,000 years ago.
These
genetic discoveries inspired recent archeological excavations of the
Balsas region that sought evidence of maize use and to better understand
the lifestyles of the people who were planting and harvesting it.
Researchers led by Anthony Ranere of Temple University and Dolores
Piperno of the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History excavated
caves and rock shelters in the region, searching for tools used by their
inhabitants, maize starch grains and other microscopic evidence of
maize.
In the Xihuatoxtla shelter, they discovered an array of stone milling tools with maize residue on them. The oldest tools were found in a layer of deposits that were 8,700 years old.
This is the earliest physical evidence of maize use obtained to date,
and it coincides very nicely with the time frame of maize domestication
estimated from DNA analysis.
The
most impressive aspect of the maize story is what it tells us about the
capabilities of agriculturalists 9,000 years ago. These people were
living in small groups and shifting their settlements seasonally. Yet
they were able to transform a grass with many inconvenient, unwanted
features into a high-yielding, easily harvested food crop. The
domestication process must have occurred in many stages over a
considerable length of time as many different, independent
characteristics of the plant were modified.
The
most crucial step was freeing the teosinte kernels from their stony
cases. Another step was developing plants where the kernels remained
intact on the cobs, unlike the teosinte ears, which shatter into
individual kernels. Early cultivators had to notice among their stands
of plants variants in which the nutritious kernels were at least
partially exposed, or whose ears held together better, or that had more
rows of kernels, and they had to selectively breed them. It is estimated
that the initial domestication process that produced the basic maize
form required at least several hundred to perhaps a few thousand years.
Every August, I thank these pioneer geneticists for their skill and patience.
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