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Selective Breeding: Making Super Plants and Animals!

Imagine picking the best seeds for the biggest pumpkins or the fluffiest puppies! That's selective breeding!

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Selective breeding

Selective breeding

wikipedia
Riband Wave moths (Idaea aversata) - in defiance of the theory of selective breeding!
A selective breeding programme in South Africa has raised several plain’s zebras that closely resemble the extinct quagga The Quagga Project
Trakehner Horse
With a bit of selective breeding you could grow your own golf balls - geograph.org.uk - 2508374
eggs of many colors
Grand Canyon National Park: California Condor 87_3515
Wild Mustard Plant Selective Breeding
Grand Canyon National Park: California Condor 87_3512
Matthiola incana (L.)W.T.Aiton Brassicaceae Distribution: The genus name commemorates Pietro Andrea Mattioli (1500/1–77), physician and botanist, whose name is Latinised to Matthiolus.. Incana means hoary or grey, referring to the colour of the leaves. Mattioli's commentaries on the Materia Medica of Dioscorides were hugely popular. Matthiola incana was first described by Linnaeus as Cheiranthus incanus, being changed to Matthiola by William Aiton, at Kew, in 1812. It is in the cabbage family. Commercial seed packets contain a mixture of single and double forms. The latter are sterile, but selective breeding has increased the proportion of double forms from the seed of single forms to as much as 80%. ‘Ten week stocks’ are popular garden annuals, flowering in the year of sowing, whereas ‘Brompton stocks’ (another variety of M. incana) are biennials, flowering the following year. Gerard (1633), called them Stocke Gillofloure or Leucoium, and notes the white and purple forms, singles and doubles. About their medicinal value he writes ‘not used in Physicke except among certain Empiricks and Quacksalvers, about love and lust matters, which for modestie I omit’. The thought of a member of the cabbage family being an aphrodisiac might encourage the gullible to take more seriously the government’s plea to eat five portions of vegetable/fruit per day. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
File:Riband Wave moths (Idaea aversata) - in defiance of the theory of selective breeding^ - geograph.org.uk - 1184988.jpg
Mutants are Cute!

Key Facts

Process Name
Selective breeding.
What It Does
Helps humans choose desirable traits in plants and animals to pass on to their offspring.
Example Plant
Corn, which was developed from a wild grass.
Example Animal
Dogs, which come in many different breeds due to selective breeding.
Fun Fact
The broccoli, cauliflower, and cabbage we eat all came from the same wild plant!

Picking the Best of the Bunch!

Have you ever noticed how some dogs are super fluffy and others are sleek? Or how some apples are extra sweet? That’s often because people have been picking the best plants and animals to have babies for a very, very long time! It’s like choosing the fastest runner in your class to be on the school's running team. You want the best traits to be passed on!

How Farmers Got Super Crops!

Long ago, farmers noticed that some wild plants had tastier seeds or grew bigger. They would save seeds from only those plants to plant the next year. Over many years, these plants became much better than their wild cousins. Think of corn! The corn we eat today looks nothing like the tiny wild grass it came from. It’s all thanks to farmers picking the best plants over and over!

Making Amazing Animal Friends!

It’s not just plants! People have also picked animals with special qualities. If a farmer had a cow that gave lots of milk, they would let that cow have calves. If a dog was super friendly and good at herding sheep, they’d let that dog have puppies. This is how we got all the different kinds of dogs we see today, from tiny Chihuahuas to giant Great Danes!

Why It's Super Important for Us!

Selective breeding helps us have the food we eat, like juicy tomatoes and crunchy carrots. It also gives us amazing pets that become part of our families. By choosing the best traits, humans have made plants and animals more useful and wonderful for everyone. It’s a clever way people have worked with nature to make life better!

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Based on content from Wikipedia · Licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0