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The A-Maize-ing Corn plant - Update 3

By
Home Inspector with Five Star Property Inspections

This post is dedicated to all those city folks out there. 

On 05/26/07 I awoke to find the birth of an a-maize-ing plant, commonly referred to as corn. This is an update as to the growth over the past 4 days and some additional information concerning this a-maize-ing plant.  We have had some great growing weather the first four days.  It has rained in the morning and sunny in the afternoon, which is perfect for the plants initial stages.  As you will see in the pictures the plant has more than quadrupled in size and the field is starting to turn all green.  As the corn continues to grow the less and less rain it will need because the plant likes it hot and dry.

Day 1

Day 1

Day 2

Day 2

Day 3

Day 3

Day 4

Day 4

As you can see the field is starting to turn all green.

Field

My horse Copper is patiently waiting......lol

Copper

But my dog Joey is keeping him in line.....lol

Joe

 

If you missed the first two post, click on the following links to see the corn growth from day one.

http://activerain.com/blogsview/108530/This-is-a-Maize

http://activerain.com/blogsview/108827/This-is-a-maize

Genetics

Many forms of maize are used for food, sometimes classified as various subspecies:

*  Flour corn - Zea mays var. amylacea

*  Popcorn - Zea mays var. everta

*  Dent corn - Zea mays var. indentata

*  Flint corn - Zea mays var. indurata

*  Sweetcorn - Zea mays var. saccharata and Zea mays var. rugosa

*  Waxy corn - Zea mays var. ceratina

*  Amylomaize - Zea mays

*  Pod corn - Zea mays var. tunicataLarrañaga ex A. St. Hil.

*  Striped maize - Zea mays var. japonica

This system has been replaced (though not entirely displaced) over the last 60 years by multi-variable classifications based on ever more data. Agronomic data was supplemented by botanical traits for a robust initial classification, then genetic, cytological, protein and DNA evidence was added. Now the categories are forms (little used), races, racial complexes, and recently branches.

Maize has 10 chromosomes (n=10). The combined length of the chromosomes is 1500 cM. Some of the maize chromosomes have what are known as "chromosomal knobs": highly repetitive heterochromatic domains that stain darkly. Individual knobs are polymorphic among strains of both maize and teosinte. Barbara McClintock used these knob markers to prove her transposon theory of "jumping genes", for which she won the 1983 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Maize is still an important model organism for genetics and developmental biology today.

There is a stock center of maize mutants, The Maize Genetics Cooperation - Stock Center, funded by the USDA Agricultural Research Service and located in the Department of Crop Sciences at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The total collection has nearly 80,000 samples. The bulk of the collection consists of several hundred named genes, plus additional gene combinations and other heritable variants. There are about 1000 chromosomal aberrations (e.g., translocations and inversions) and stocks with abnormal chromosome numbers (e.g., tetraploids). Genetic data describing the maize mutant stocks as well as myriad other data about maize genetics can be accessed at MaizeGDB, the Maize Genetics and Genomics Database.[7]

In 2005, the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the Department of Energy (DOE) formed a consortium to sequence the maize genome. The resulting DNA sequence data will be deposited immediately into GenBank, a public repository for genome-sequence data. Sequencing the corn genome has been considered difficult because of its large size and complex genetic arrangements. The genome has 50,000-60,000 genes scattered among the 2.5 billion bases - molecules that form DNA - that make up its 10 chromosomes. (By comparison, the human genome contains about 2.9 billion bases and 26,000 genes.)

 

Celeste "SALLY" Cheeseman
Liberty Homes - Mililani, HI
(RA) AHWD CRS ePRO OAHU HAWAII REAL ESTATE
Okay...we couldn't wait...we had sweet Kauai corn last night..haha!  Beautiful animals!
May 30, 2007 01:57 PM
Gwendolyn Wrigh
Victory Virtual Solutions - Beaufort, SC
Victory Virtual Solutions
We couldn't wait either...we had sweet corn with our spaghetti!
May 30, 2007 02:16 PM
Robert Cramer
Five Star Property Inspections - Belleville, IL
Sally & Gwendolyn - Sorry to disappoint you, but this is field corn, which is not the best for eating.  At least by humans.  I like it but then again I am a farm boy....lol
May 30, 2007 04:20 PM