Gilbert Fritz wrote:
However, for this to happen, we also have to preserve the original strains. If we mixed up all the corns on earth (corn crosses quite a lot) within a few years we would have wiped out a lot of the diversity. (Unless you maintained a HUGE population of corn each year.) If nobody kept pure strains, various genetics would be lost. In other words, to benefit from diversity, we need to preserve diversity.
If everyone mixed up all the corn varieties and then selected what grew best, we would end up with more locally adapted varieties of corn than we had before. The genetics would be reallocated, but we wouldn't necessarily lose anything. The old varieties would go away, except in places where those phenotypes were particularly successful, but the new varieties would still encompass all of the diversity that existed before.
Gilbert Fritz wrote:
Also, in some cases, the results would be inedible. If you grow zucchini, and a neighbor two houses down grows gourds, the bitter gourd genetics would soon overcome your pleasant tasting squash genetics. Bitter wild lettuce with milky sap might cross with your lettuce population and overwhelm it. Any brassica will cross with weeds ( and one another; cabbage, kale, Brussels sprouts, etc. are genetically one species.) Carrots will cross with Queen Ann's Lace, a common wild flower, and the resulting carrots would be small, white, and fibrous. Most of our crops have come a long way from their wild ancestors. While the wild plants may have important genetics to give, we will want to also keep the results of thousands of years of plant selection and breeding.
This overlooks two things. First, pollination declines dramatically with distance, so if you have a stand of zucchini in your
yard and a neighbor grows gourds, you'll usually get a little crossing with the gourds, but mostly just zucchini. Second, if you are going to breed plants successfully, you have to select the plants with the traits that you desire. So, when you find a zucchini with undesireable gourd characteristics, you simply pull that one and don't allow it to contribute to the next generation. In rare cases, you may actually get a useful contribution from the gourds that you would not otherwise have seen.
I grow lines of cabbage, turnips, rutabagas, mustards, broccolis, cauliflowers, etc. all in a single acre with no cross-pollination controls (and we keep
bees) and find that cross pollination is not much of a problem. Sure, I get interesting crosses every year that go to the table or the
compost pile, but most of my types stay true. It would be a mess if I were trying to preserve specific heirloom varieties, but I am happy to just take seed from the best of every year, even though that means that every year is a little different.