whereas wild blueberries grow low to the ground on "lowbush" plants. Cultivated blueberries are typically much larger and more uniform in size than wild blueberries. While this may make them more ...
Loss of cultivated plant diversity — so-called genetic erosion ... of biological diversity including cultigens, their wild relatives and systematic collection of cultivars throughout their ...
In Dangerous Liaisons? When Cultivated Plants Mate with Their Wild Relatives, Ellstrand, a professor of genetics at the University of California at Riverside and a widely respected contributor to ...
Their research reviews a host of past literature and evidence to examine why just a minority of these wild plants were domesticated and how modern cultivated varieties differ at a genetic level ...
Their research reviews a host of past literature and evidence to examine why just a minority of these wild plants were domesticated and how modern cultivated varieties differ at a genetic level ...
Discover the diverse diet of Neolithic farmers, featuring grains, tubers, and wild plants, through analysis of ancient ...
The Funnel Beaker Culture, which flourished between 4000 and 2800 BCE in Southern Scandinavia and northern Germany, marks the first era when people in the region began farming and keeping livestock.