logo
How did the tomato create the potato? Chinese scientists trace tuber's hybrid past

How did the tomato create the potato? Chinese scientists trace tuber's hybrid past

They could not look less alike in the supermarket aisle, but a Chinese-led research team has uncovered an ancient link that makes a forerunner of the tomato a
genetic parent of the potato.
By examining genomes and data sets from cultivated and wild potato species, the scientists traced the tuberous plant's evolution back about nine million years to a moment when a
tomato ancestor created a hybrid with a group of potato-like – but tuberless – plants called etuberosum. They published their findings in the journal Cell on Thursday.
All varieties of potato have underground tubers, but until now it has not been clear how they developed them and diversified.
The researchers concluded that hybridisation was a key driver of the development of tubers – the part of the potato that makes it a
staple crop today.
'We not only show that the cultivated potato and its 107 wild relatives are derived from an ancient hybrid speciation event, but also that tuber formation itself, a key innovative trait, has a
hybrid ancestry,' the team said in the paper.
The potato is the third most widely consumed food crop globally, after rice and wheat, and is eaten by over 1 billion people, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Absolutely impossible': how China created super steel for nuclear fusion
‘Absolutely impossible': how China created super steel for nuclear fusion

South China Morning Post

time7 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

‘Absolutely impossible': how China created super steel for nuclear fusion

In the quest to harness the power of the stars, one of the greatest challenges lies not in mastering fusion , but in finding materials strong enough to contain it. Advertisement At the heart of a nuclear fusion reactor is an ultra-powerful superconducting magnet, operating at temperatures near absolute zero and under immense magnetic stress. For decades, scientists from around the world have struggled to find materials that simultaneously endure such extreme cold and extreme force. Chinese scientists have detailed how they created CHSN01 (China high-strength low-temperature steel No 1), deployed it this year in the construction of world's first fusion nuclear power generation reactor and put China in a leading position in materials science. 02:24 A look inside the world's largest nuclear fusion reactor in Japan A look inside the world's largest nuclear fusion reactor in Japan It was a decade-long journey marked by setbacks, doubt and ultimate triumph. In 2011, the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), which is under construction in southern France, faced a critical material challenge. Testing revealed that the cryogenic steel prepared had become brittle and lost its ductility. ITER, the world's largest fusion experiment, was launched in 2006 from a collaboration between seven members, including China. Advertisement At the core of the fusion device, superconducting magnets are armoured with cryogenic steel, like a jacket engineered to endure ultra-low temperatures. This material must withstand both liquid helium's 269 degrees Celsius (516 Fahrenheit) cryogenic environment and the massive Lorentz forces generated by intense magnetic fields.

How China's new ‘Darwin Monkey' could shake up future of AI in world first
How China's new ‘Darwin Monkey' could shake up future of AI in world first

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

How China's new ‘Darwin Monkey' could shake up future of AI in world first

Chinese engineers have unveiled the world's first brain-like computer made up of more than 2 billion artificial neurons. The neuron count of the 'Darwin Monkey' approaches that of a macaque and could be used to advance human brain-inspired artificial intelligence (AI), according to its developers at Zhejiang University. The Darwin Monkey is the latest generation of brain-inspired computers produced by Zhejiang University researchers. 'This is the world's first brain-like computer based on a dedicated neuromorphic chip with more than 2 billion neurons,' the university said on its social media account on Saturday. The computing system, made up of 960 Darwin 3 brain-inspired computing chips creating over 100 billion synapses, is 'a step closer to achieving more advanced brain-like intelligence', it said in the post. The Darwin Monkey has been successfully deployed to complete tasks like content generation, logical reasoning and mathematics, using the groundbreaking Chinese AI company DeepSeek's brain-like large model.

Earthquakes can power hidden life in the darkest depths of Earth, China-led study finds
Earthquakes can power hidden life in the darkest depths of Earth, China-led study finds

South China Morning Post

time2 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Earthquakes can power hidden life in the darkest depths of Earth, China-led study finds

Beneath our feet, in sunless depths once thought barren, a vast and vibrant ecosystem thrives A groundbreaking study by Chinese and Canadian scientists has revealed the surprising 'energy engine' powering this hidden biosphere: the very breaking and grinding of Earth's crust during earthquakes and tectonic shifts. Forget 19th century French novelist Jules Verne's fantastical depictions of mastodons and giant dragonflies dwelling in mushroom forests nine to 12 metres (30 to 40 feet) tall in an illuminated subterranean world. Traditional science held that kilometres below the surface, cut off from sunlight and surface organics, life could not exist. Yet, recent discoveries have unveiled a massive, active deep biosphere, harbouring an estimated 95 per cent of Earth's prokaryotes and constituting roughly one-fifth of Earth's total biomass. But how do these microbes survive in the deepest, most isolated zones? A study led by Zhu Jianxi and He Hongping, professors at the Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry (GIG) under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Kurt Konhauser, professor at the University of Alberta, provides an answer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store