Abstract

The Andean region is one of the areas with the earliest signs of food production systems and highest agrobiodiversity of the world, which resulted from millennia of domestication in a context of high ecosystem heterogeneity and human cultures valuing diversity for risk management. FAO has reported nearly 4000 varieties of cultivated potatoes still grown in the Andes, 3000 of them currently occurring in Peru. Such diversity has enormous sources of variation in wild (atoq papa) and weedy (araq papaandk’ipa papa) potatoes that coexist with crops, but their variation, interactions and mechanisms influencing diversification processes still require studies. In order to have a panorama of the variation and mechanisms influencing it in a regional setting, we studied biocultural factors favoring potatoes diversity in communities of Cusco and Apurimac, Peru. Our study documented the regional variation of wild, weedy, and cultivated potatoes recognized by local Quechua people and conducted semi-structured interviews to document their use, cultural value, and strategies of gene flow management implemented. We also studied their phenology, floral biology, flower visitors, and conducted experimental crosses between the wildS. candolleanumand 30 varieties of cultivated potatoes. We identified the wild potatoesS. acaule,S. brevicauleandS. candolleanumand 53 varieties ofaraq papaused and managed by local people. The latter provide nearly one third of the annual consumption of tubers by people interviewed and are, therefore, highly valued, maintained and managed in crop fields (chacras). People recognized that crosses between wild, weedy, and cultivated potatoes occur, and identified flower visitors and frugivores consuming their berries. Overlap of blooming periods and flower visitors of wild, weedy, and cultivated potatoes was recorded. Almost all flower visitors are shared among the different potato species and varieties, the bumble bees being particularly relevant in pollination of all taxa studied. We recorded seed production in nearly 35% of the experimental crosses.K’ipa papasare sets of mixtures of plants resulting from remaining tubers of cultivated potatoes, but also those from seeds that may result from hybridization of wild, weedy, and cultivated potatoes. Since local people commonly usek’ipa papavarieties and some of them are kept for planting inchacras, sexual reproduction ink’ipa papasis possibly one main mechanism of variation and source of new varieties of crops. Maintaining wild and weedy potatoes, and the natural and cultural mechanisms of gene flow is crucial forin situconservation and generation of potato variation.

Highlights

  • The Andean region has been recognized as one of the areas with the earliest signs of food production in the Americas and the highest agrobiodiversity of the world (Harlan, 1975; Hawkes, 1983; Vavilov, 1992; Brush et al, 1995; Zimmerer, 2003, 2016; Brush, 2004; Brack and Bravo, 2006; Clement et al, 2021)

  • This study analyses the possible different sources of variation occurring in a particular area, the natural and human processes influencing on their state, and their possible role to explain the mechanisms favoring gene flow among such sources of variation

  • Since the classic reflexions by Darwin (1859), variation of organisms under domestication has been associated to human selection, but it is clear that selection is not the only evolutionary force influencing this process

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Summary

Introduction

The Andean region has been recognized as one of the areas with the earliest signs of food production in the Americas and the highest agrobiodiversity of the world (Harlan, 1975; Hawkes, 1983; Vavilov, 1992; Brush et al, 1995; Zimmerer, 2003, 2016; Brush, 2004; Brack and Bravo, 2006; Clement et al, 2021). In Peru, Brack and Bravo (2006) identified 180 native crop species, nearly 1700 plant species under some management type, most of them semi-domesticated, and nearly 4700 wild plant species whose products are used by people of the Andean, Amazonian, and the arid and semiarid zones of the Coastal region. Such diversity is representative of the remarkable agrobiodiversity of the area. It is one approach to contextualize the processes influencing the population genetics of wild, weedy and crop potatoes in the area

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