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If you never imagined to see a multicolor corn cob in your life, you'll change your mind after reading this post.
If you never imagined to see a multicolor corn cob in your life, you'll change your mind after reading this post.
Believe
it or not, coloured corn does exist. To be precise, it was crafted
not too long ago, thanks to the patience and a certain degree of
experience with corn growing of a US farmer, Carl Barnes.
Mr
Barnes, a man with Cherokee roots, still living in Oklahoma, wanted
to trace back his origins growing ancient varieties of corn, which
had sunken into
oblivion, replaced by hardy and pest resistant cultivars.
While
his corn was growing, he imagined that he might have the possibility
to create a brand new variety of corn with multicoloured kernels, all
in the same hue, or beautiful rainbow cobs.
Do
not fear, I am not talking about GMO; there's already plenty of
people saying everything, usually talking out of turn. I would like
to talk about a man who devoted a great part of his life to the
selection of plants with particular cob colours. As a result, he
planted this crops again, observing what would happen
in the next generation.
To
be complete, we have to keep in mind that the cob's colour is a
characteristic which is not influenced by the environment, unlike,
for example, the height of the plant. Thus, the multicolor cob only
derives from man-made hybridization.
We
do not know precisely for how many years Barnes worked to obtain the
Glass Gem Corn, picking the cobs with the vividest colours, however
the result is really striking and eye-catching.
Most
of the corn diversity existing in the past is now gone, probably due
to the diffusion of one-crop cultivation, more resistant varieties
with a better yield. This has inevitably caused a restriction in
plant biodiversity; in fact every plant which was not productive or
resistant, became an endangered species.
You
can have a look at the Glass Gem Corn in the photos below. The cobs
are edible, though is preferable to use them for flour and pop corn
than to eat the corn directly from the cob. However, I'm afraid you
won't be able to show your friends a coloured pop corn, as it is
white, just like the “normal” one.
Of
course, the kernels can be used to grow a new generation of corn!
Glass Gem Corn - via Seeds Trust Facebook Page |
There's
an obvious question to ask: what is the purpose of a multicoloured
cob, if the yellow ones are edible?
In
my opinion, adding a little more diversity in a constantly
uniformating world wouldn't be
bad.
Furthermore,
the rainbow cob honours the job of a passionated man, with a unique
perseverance we all should keep in mind.
Carl
Barnes was only the first of professional and amateur farmers who
began growing Glass Gem Corn. The precious kernels were donated to
the Seeds Trust, a little family-run company in Arizona, who is in
charge for the preservation of this variety of corn. Later on, the
company evolved into the NATIVE Seeds/Search, a nonprofit
organization preserving seeds of particular plant species
(www.nativeseeds.org).
On
their website you can find an online shop, from where you can order a
variety of plant seeds, among which, of course, the famous Glass Gem
Corn.
In 1983 Barbara McClintock was awarded with the Nobel prize for her research about transposable elements in corn genome.
The
transposable elements are parts of the DNA which jump here and there
inside the genome (even the human genome) and alter in some different
ways the genetic expression: as a result of the insertion of a
transposon in its sequence, a gene can stop producing proteins.
The
great discovery in McClintock's work was that the genome was not
static. We could say, just keeping it simple, that there are two
types of transposable elements: the ones which can move by themselves
and the ones which cannot.
It
is very similar to the story of the two kinds of people in the world:
those on the driver's seat going wherever they want and those on the
passenger's seat, always needing someone to drive them anywhere.
Unlike
genetic recombination, which is aimed to a determined position on the
genes, transposition is casual and it can happen on each of the 10
corn chromosomes.
A
kernel has three layers: endosperm, the internal part, pericarp, the
middle layer, and aleurone, the external part.
The
kernel's colour is regulated by the overlapping of these three
layers. They can have different hue or even show no colour, as it
happens in the endosperm when the transposon interrupts the gene that
usually produces the protein responsible for the yellow colour.
After
reading this text, a friend of mine asked a question that made me
deepen my researches. I'll write it here for you.
Most
of the colours displayed by the cobs are secondary; they are formed
by the overlapping of different coloured layers. Even to me, a total
ignorant about drawing and painting, that sounds right.
Yellow
and red, primary colours, are pretty normal even in common
experience: you saw plenty of yellow cobs and the red ones are
composed of kernels with a white endosperm and red external layers,
rich in anthocyanins and phlobaphenes.
But
how do you explain the blue kernels? It is a primary colour, so the
overlapping game does not work anymore; furthermore, the external
layers are usually reddish, so
how do you get this colour?
Well,
blue corn does exist, dear readers, and it is simply corn with a high
concentration of anthocyanins in the external layers of the kernel,
which turn blue from the usual red hue.
It
is one of that ancient varieties of corn we were talking about at the
beginning of this post. It was once grown by the native american
tribes of Hopi and it is still grown today in some US states, like
Arizona and New Mexico, as well as in Mexico. You would be surprised
to find blue corn chips in the United States!
So,
even for blue kernels we can speak about overlapping of
anthocyanin-rich layers on a white endosperm.
If
you want to widen your knowledge about this topic, you can check this
post, that was really revealing for me: Jumping genes make fall come alive from Kirk Maxey's Blog.
I
would also like to personally thank the author of this blog for his
kind helpfulness and dedicate this post to him.
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