2011
DOI: 10.1186/1746-4269-7-40
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Ecological and socio-cultural factors influencing in situ conservation of crop diversity by traditional Andean households in Peru

Abstract: BackgroundThe Peruvian Andean region is a main center of plant domestication of the world. There, several tuber species were domesticated and the area lodges one of the most important reservoirs of their varieties and wild relatives. It is also the setting of traditional cultures using and conserving them. However, crop genetic erosion has been reported in the region since several decades ago; therefore, understanding factors influencing both loss and maintenance of crop variation is relevant to design conserv… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…This is consistent with the asymmetry in the number of cultivated ethnotaxa per family and the high number of very rare ethnotaxa found by Velásquez-Milla et al [3] in Andean towns in Peru. Our records also partially match with those observed in neighboring communities by Pinotti et al [45].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
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“…This is consistent with the asymmetry in the number of cultivated ethnotaxa per family and the high number of very rare ethnotaxa found by Velásquez-Milla et al [3] in Andean towns in Peru. Our records also partially match with those observed in neighboring communities by Pinotti et al [45].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Díaz et al [46] define maize and potato as diacritic elements of present regional food (both traditional and tourism-related innovations). In line with the diversity of food uses found in the present, Cámara Hernandez et al [34], Velásquez-Milla et al [3], and Díaz et al [46] explain the preferential and alternative uses of ethnotaxa in different preparations, consistent with the particular characteristics of each ethnotaxon (oily, mealy, hard, or soft, etc. ).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
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“…Nevertheless, cross pollination in mixtures of different varieties and even species, as practiced by local peasants, has been essential to obtain the high Puna agrobiodiversity (Rabinowitz et al, 1990). The best-documented case is the one regarding potato agrobiodiversity, where bee species from the Apidae, Colletidae, and Megachilidae families tended to cross-pollinate different varieties, subspecies and even species, contributing to the genetic differentiation of about 3000 different genotypes (Rabinowitz et al, 1990;Scurrah et al, 2008;Velásquez-Milla et al, 2011).…”
Section: Genetic Resources Pollination Regulation and Pest And Disementioning
confidence: 98%
“…Ongoing agrobiodiversity research that adopts landscape-level approaches to native food plants and their importance to the rural and urban poor are focused especially on puna-region crops like Andean potatoes, oca and other tubers (e.g., Tohme et al, 1995;Flores et al, 2003;Manrique Klinge, 2003;Seminario, 2004;Seminario and Coronel, 2004;del P. Ramírez Vidaurre et al, 2006;Pauro et al, 2011;Velásquez-Milla et al, 2011). Present-day initiatives on nutritional quality and food security also draw on Pulgar Vidal's emphasis on indigenous foodstuffs.…”
Section: Food Security Utilizing Indigenous Agrobiodiversitymentioning
confidence: 98%