From a press release :

"Vanilla tahitensis... is found to exist only in cultivation;
natural, wild populations of the orchid have never been encountered.

... a team of investigators led by Pesach Lubinsky, a postdoctoral 
researcher with Norman Ellstrand, a professor of genetics in UC Riverside’s 
Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, claims to have traced Tahitian 
vanilla back to its true origins.

In the August issue of the American Journal of Botany,
Lubinsky and colleagues use genetic and ethnohistoric analysis to argue 
that Tahitian vanilla began its evolutionary journey as a pre-Columbian 
Maya cultivar inside the tropical forests of Guatemala.

“All the evidence points in the same direction,” Lubinsky said.
“Our DNA analysis corroborates what the historical sources say, namely, 
that vanilla was a trade item brought to Tahiti by French sailors in the 
mid-19th century.
The French Admiral responsible for introducing vanilla to Tahiti, Alphonse 
Hamelin, used vanilla cuttings from the Philippines.
The historical record tells us that vanilla – which isn’t native to the 
Philippines – was previously introduced to the region via the Manila 
Galleon trade from the New World, and specifically from Guatemala.”

The Manila galleons (1565-1815) were Spanish trading ships that sailed once 
or twice each year across the Pacific Ocean between Manila in the 
Philippines and Acapulco, Mexico.
The ships brought Chinese porcelain, silk, ivory, spices, and other exotic 
goods to Mexico in exchange for New World silver.

The genetic data Lubinsky and his colleagues obtained confirmed that the 
closest relatives to Tahitian vanilla, from among 40 different Vanilla 
species they analyzed from across the world, were two species that grow 
naturally only in the tropical forests of Central America: Vanilla 
planifolia and Vanilla odorata.
V. planifolia is also the primary species cultivated for commercial 
vanilla, and is grown principally in Madagascar and Indonesia.
V. odorata has never been cultivated.

...
the researchers... could find no Tahitian vanilla growing wild in 
Guatemala, which is where its closest relatives grew. The researchers 
decided to give their genetic data a second look.
This time, by comparing patterns of relatedness in DNA sequences from both 
the nucleus and the chloroplast (a plant cell’s photosynthetic factory), 
they discovered that Tahitian vanilla fit the pattern of being a hybrid 
offspring between V. planifolia and V. odorata.
...
Lubinsky explained.
“The pre-Columbian Maya had been managing their forests for millennia to 
cultivate cacao and to make chocolate, and we know they were also 
cultivating vanilla to use it as a chocolate spice.
The Maya created these forest gardens by introducing different types of 
species of wild cacao and vanilla from the surrounding forests, which meant 
that species that had previously been geographically separated were then 
able to hybridize because they were in the same place.
That’s the scenario we present in our research paper for how Tahitian 
vanilla got started.
It is an evolutionary product, but also a Maya artifact.”

Seung-Chul Kim, an assistant professor of systematics in the Department of 
Botany and Plant Sciences...
“Pesach has demonstrated that Vanilla species can exchange genes quite 
frequently across species barriers,” Kim said.
...

Lubinsky, Kim and their colleagues plan to do further research on vanilla.
In January 2009, they will begin mapping cacao-vanilla forest gardens in 
Belize, southern Mexico and Guatemala."

URL : http://www.newsroom.ucr.edu/cgi-bin/display.cgi?id=1911

*****************
Regards,

VB


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