Landrace: Difference between revisions
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{{subpages}}A '''landrace''' is a grouping of animals or plants with similar characteristics that have been developed from natural or wild populations. Landraces can be the result of natural forces or domestication, when naturally-occurring, they are plants (or [[animal]]s) that are ideally suited to a particular region or environment; domesticated landraces have been [[selective breeding|selectively bred]] to replicate or enhance some genetic characteristics while reducing or eliminating others. | {{subpages}} | ||
A '''landrace''' is a grouping of animals or plants with similar characteristics that have been developed from natural or wild populations. Landraces can be the result of natural forces or domestication, when naturally-occurring, they are plants (or [[animal]]s) that are ideally suited to a particular region or environment; domesticated landraces have been [[selective breeding|selectively bred]] to replicate or enhance some genetic characteristics while reducing or eliminating others. | |||
In animals, the term 'landrace' is taken to mean a type or group derived from a specific population but not yet formalised into a consistently replicable breed, or the specific natural population from which a breed derives. | In animals, the term 'landrace' is taken to mean a type or group derived from a specific population but not yet formalised into a consistently replicable breed, or the specific natural population from which a breed derives. | ||
In plants, a landrace is a cultivated crop [[species]] that has evolved from populations due to selective pressures from traditional [[farmer]]s. | In plants, a landrace is a cultivated crop [[species]] that has evolved from populations due to selective pressures from traditional [[farmer]]s. |
Revision as of 00:24, 29 January 2009
A landrace is a grouping of animals or plants with similar characteristics that have been developed from natural or wild populations. Landraces can be the result of natural forces or domestication, when naturally-occurring, they are plants (or animals) that are ideally suited to a particular region or environment; domesticated landraces have been selectively bred to replicate or enhance some genetic characteristics while reducing or eliminating others.
In animals, the term 'landrace' is taken to mean a type or group derived from a specific population but not yet formalised into a consistently replicable breed, or the specific natural population from which a breed derives.
In plants, a landrace is a cultivated crop species that has evolved from populations due to selective pressures from traditional farmers.