Authors
Mauricio R Bellon, David Hodson, Jon Hellin
Publication date
2011/8/16
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
108
Issue
33
Pages
13432-13437
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Climate change is predicted to have major impacts on small-scale farmers in Mexico whose livelihoods depend on rain-fed maize. We examined the capacity of traditional maize seed systems to provide these farmers with appropriate genetic material under predicted agro-ecological conditions associated with climate change. We studied the structure and spatial scope of seed systems of 20 communities in four transects across an altitudinal gradient from 10–2,980 m above sea level in five states of eastern Mexico. Results indicate that 90% of all of the seed lots are obtained within 10 km of a community and 87% within an altitudinal range of ±50 m but with variation across four agro-climate environments: wet lowland, dry lowland, wet upper midlatitude, and highlands. Climate models suggest a drying and warming trend for the entire study area during the main maize season, leading to substantial shifts in the spatial …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MR Bellon, D Hodson, J Hellin - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011