Zea (genus)

"Teosinte" redirects here. For other uses, see Teosinte (disambiguation).
Zea
Zea mays
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Commelinids
Order: Poales
Family: Poaceae
Subfamily: Panicoideae
Tribe: Andropogoneae
Genus: Zea
L.
Type species
Zea mays
L.
Synonyms[1]
  • Euchlaena Schrad.
  • Mays Mill.
  • Mayzea Raf.
  • Reana Brign.
  • Thalysia Kuntze
  • × Euchlaezea Jan.Ammal ex Bor
  • Mais Adans.

Zea is a genus of plants in the grass family. The best-known species is Z. mays, variously called maize or corn or Indian corn, one of the most important crops for human societies over much of the world. Several wild species are commonly known as teosintes and are native to Mesoamerica.

Recognized species

teosinte (left), maize-teosinte hybrid (middle), maize (right)

There are five recognized species in the genus: Zea diploperennis, Zea perennis, Zea luxurians, Zea nicaraguensis, and Zea mays. The last species is further divided into four subspecies: huehuetenangensis, mexicana, parviglumis, and mays. The first three subspecies are teosintes; the last is maize, or corn, the only domesticated taxon in the genus Zea. The species are grouped into two sections, section Luxuriantes, with the first four species, and section Zea with Zea mays. The former section is typified by dark-staining knobs made up of heterochromatin that are terminal on most chromosome arms, while most subspecies of section Zea may have 0 to 3 knobs between each chromosome end and the centromere and very few terminal knobs (except Zea mays huehuetenangensis which has many large terminal knobs). The two perennials are thought to be one species by some.

Description

Microscopic view of Zea seed

There are both annual and perennial teosinte species. Zea diploperennis and Zea perennis are perennial, while all other taxa are annual. All species are diploid (n=10) with the exception of Zea perennis, which is tetraploid (n=20). The different species and subspecies of teosinte can be readily distinguished based on morphological, cytogenetic, protein, and DNA differences and on geographic origin, although the two perennials are sympatric and very similar. What many consider to be the most puzzling teosinte is Zea mays huehuetenangensis which combines a morphology rather like Zea mays parviglumis with many terminal chromosome knobs and an isozyme position between the two sections. Considered to be phenotypically the most distinctive, as well as the most threatened, teosinte is Zea nicaraguensis. This teosinte thrives in flooded conditions along 200 meters of a coastal estuarine river in northwest Nicaragua.

Teosintes strongly resemble maize in many ways, notably their tassel (male inflorescence) morphology. Teosintes are distinguished from maize most obviously by their numerous branches each bearing bunches of distinctive, small female inflorescences. These spikes mature to form a two-ranked 'ear' of five to ten triangular or trapezoidal, black or brown disarticulating segments, each with one seed. Each seed is enclosed by a very hard fruitcase, consisting of a cupule or depression in the rachis and a tough lower glume. This protects them from the digestive processes of ruminants that forage on teosinte and aid in seed distribution through their droppings. Teosinte seed exhibits some resistance to germination but will quickly germinate if treated with a dilute solution of hydrogen peroxide.

Origin of maize and interaction with teosintes

Teosintes are critical components of maize evolution, but opinions vary about which taxa were involved. According to the most widely held evolutionary model, the crop was derived directly from Zea mays parviglumis by selection of key mutations;[2] up to 12% of its genetic material came from Zea mays mexicana through introgression. Another model proposes that a tiny-eared wild maize was domesticated, and after being spread from east-central Mexico, this cultigen hybridized with Zea luxurians or Zea diploperennis resulting in a great explosion of maize genetic diversity, ear and kernel forms, and capacity to adapt to new habitats, as well as increased yields. A third model suggests that the early maize resulted from a cross between Zea diploperennis and a species of Tripsacum; support for this is minimal . A fourth model posits that teosinte resulted from hybridization between an early wild form of Zea mays mays and Tripsacum.[3]

All but the Nicaraguan species of teosinte may grow in or very near corn fields, providing opportunities for introgression between teosinte and maize. First- and later-generation hybrids are often found in the fields, but the rate of gene exchange is quite low. Some populations of Zea mays mexicana display Vavilovian mimicry within cultivated maize fields, having evolved a maize-like form as a result of the farmers' selective weeding pressure. In some areas of Mexico, teosintes are regarded by maize farmers as a noxious weed, while in a few areas farmers regard it as a beneficial companion plant, and encourage its introgression into their maize.

Early dispersal of maize in the Americas

According to Matsuoka et al, the available early maize gene pool can be divided into three clusters:

  1. An Andean group, that includes the hand-grenade-shaped ear types and some other Andean maize (35 plants);
  2. All other South American and Mexican maize (80 plants);
  3. U.S. maize (40 plants)

There are also some other intermediate genomes, or admixtures of these clusters.

According to these authors, "The maize of the Andes Mountains with its distinctive hand-grenade-shaped ears was derived from the maize of lowland South America, which in turn came from maize of the lowlands of Guatemala and southern Mexico."[2]

Ecology

Zea species are used as food plants by the larvae (caterpillars) of some Lepidoptera species including (in the Americas) the Fall Armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda) the Corn Earworm (Helicoverpa zea), and the stem borers Diatraea and Chilo; in the Old World, it is attacked by the Double-striped Pug, the cutworms Heart and Club and Heart and Dart, the Hypercompe indecisa, the Rustic Shoulder-knot, the Setaceous Hebrew Character and Turnip Moths, and the European Corn Borer (Ostrinia nubilalis), among many others.

Virtually all populations of teosinte are either threatened or endangered: Zea diploperennis exists in an area of only a few square miles; Zea nicaraguensis survives as approx. 6000 plants in an area 200 x 150 meters. The Mexican and Nicaraguan governments have taken action in recent years to protect wild teosinte populations, using both in-situ and ex-situ conservation methods. There is currently a large amount of scientific interest in conferring beneficial teosinte traits, such as insect resistance, perennialism and flood tolerance, to cultivated maize lines, although this is very difficult due to linked deleterious teosinte traits.

Species[1][4]

  1. Zea diploperennis H.H.Iltis et al. - Jalisco
  2. Zea luxurians (Durieu & Asch.) R.M.Bird - Chiapas, Guatemala, Honduras
  3. Zea mays L. - southern Mexico, Guatemala; cultivated in many places
  4. Zea mexicana (Schrad.) Kuntze - Mexico (from Chihuahua to Oaxaca)
  5. Zea nicaraguensis H.H.Iltis & B.F.Benz - Nicaragua
  6. Zea perennis (Hitchc.) Reeves & Mangelsd. - Jalisco

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
  2. 2.0 2.1 Matsuoka, Y.; Vigouroux, Y; Goodman, MM; Sanchez G, J; Buckler, E; Doebley, J (2002). "A single domestication for maize shown by multilocus microsatellite genotyping". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 99 (9): 6080–4. doi:10.1073/pnas.052125199. PMC 122905. PMID 11983901.
  3. Paul. C. Mangelsdorf: Corn: Its Origin, Evolution and Improvement, Belknap Press, 1974
  4. The Plant List search for Zea

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zea.
Wikispecies has information related to: Zea