Tag: crop wild relatives

  • Wednesday, April 22, 12:00 noon – 1:30 pm Eastern – Crop Wild Relatives, Online

    Gardening and farming are challenging in the best of times- and even more so with a changing climate. In this Ecological Landscape Alliance online presentation on April 22 at noon, we’ll learn why the wild and weedy relatives of crops hold the key helping crops resist pests and disease, and tolerate drought and other climate challenges.

    Scientists conserve crop wild relatives in gene banks and elsewhere, but we’ll learn about many you can find in your native plant nursery, in natural areas, or even growing as weeds in your yard.

    In this talk, we’ll look at domesticated crops and their wild relatives as all part of a process across a spectrum. We’ll also learn about new crops that breeders are working on to bring us into more regenerative perennial polycultural systems, which provide ecosystem services while feeding us.

    Presenter Nan McCarry is an academic researcher at heart, collaborating with scientists across the country on the conservation of “plant genetic resources,” which you will learn about in this talk. She also enjoys how this work intersects with her gardening, sourcing seeds, and work at Watermark Woods Native Plants in Hamilton, Virginia. Nan received her master’s degree in Geography from the University of Texas at Austin, doing her thesis research in Guatemala on traditional home gardens. She has been converting three acres of lawn to a native food forest. She is a member of the Virginia Native Plant Society, the Society for Ethnobotany, and Loudoun Wildlife Conservancy. Nan is writing a book on plant domestication, or how our crops evolved to be our crops, a topic she will touch on in this talk.

    $10 ELA members, $20 nonmembers. Register at https://www.ecolandscaping.org/new-events-calendar/

  • Sunday, May 18, 2025 – Botanical Art Worldwide 2025

    Once again, botanical artists around the world will join together to curate simultaneous exhibitions of botanical art to raise awareness of the rejuvenation of this artform and bring attention to plants and their importance to humanity. Special events will also be held to celebrate the Worldwide Day of Botanical Art on May 18, 2025.

    The second Botanical Art Worldwide Project will focus on and celebrate biodiversity in the crops that have been closely associated with the human species over thousands of years. The theme is designed to draw attention to the vast variety of food and useful plants available, in contrast with the relatively few varieties currently used in mass cultivation. Plants eligible for inclusion are those cultivated for food, textiles, building, energy, and medicine.

    Currently, many heritage species and varieties are only cultivated in small quantities by specialist growers on a limited scale. It is vital to promote this genetic diversity in a world challenged by a growing population, changing climate, and habitat losses.

    Possible subjects include heritage plant cultivars developed by traditional means (selection, hybridization, and propagation) and their wild relatives, as well as ancient heritage crops being brought back into cultivation.

    HERITAGE CROPS: Crops that are not used in modern, large scale monocultural agriculture. Crops chosen should have been in cultivation for a minimum of 50 years.

    CROP WILD RELATIVES: Wild species that can be hybridized with cultivated crops to impart a new characteristic to the cultivated crop, or that are foraged wild plants.

    ANCIENT CROPS: Those that have been cultivated for hundreds or thousands of years in the same form.

    For information on participating, visit https://www.botanicalartworldwide.info/

    © 2013 Joan McGann, Arizona Barrel Cactus (detail)