Hugh Iltis

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Hugh Iltis
Hugh Iltis.jpg
Iltis at his 85th birthday celebration (2010).
Born (1925-04-07) April 7, 1925 (age 99)
Brno, Czechoslovakia
Known for Discoveries in the domestication of corn (maize)

Hugh Hellmut Iltis (born April 7, 1925 in Brno, Czechoslovakia) is Professor Emeritus of Botany at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and is best known for his discoveries in the domestication of corn (maize).

Raised in Czechoslovakia, Iltis left Europe as a refugee just weeks prior to Nazi invasion of the country in March 1939. His father, Hugo Iltis, was a teacher at the Brno Gymnasium, a botanist and geneticist, and a vocal opponent of Nazi eugenics. He was the biographer of Gregor Mendel.[1]

Iltis served in the U.S. Army in Europe during World War II, initially in an artillery unit. He was later transferred to an intelligence unit. After the war, Iltis was posted in Germany, where he sorted through piles of documents left by the Nazis, uncovering evidence of German war crimes.

Iltis was primarily trained in plant systematics and taxonomy with a focus on the families Cleomaceae and Capparaceae. While at the University of Arkansas from 1952–55, Iltis completed a study of the Capparaceae of Nevada. Later publications formed a series, Studies in the Capparaceae, which includes 24 publications, including newly described species and genera. An associated series of papers describes research in the family Cleomaceae, which was separated from the Capparaceae.

An avid plant collector, Iltis led numerous expeditions to many parts of the world to search for new plant species. As a botanist, he served as the Director of the University of Wisconsin–Madison Herbarium. His work is of great economic importance, because he identified new sources of genetic variability that have been used by plant breeders.

Iltis used taxonomic and morphological approaches to investigate the domestication of corn. His work supported the view that domestic corn was derived from a species of teosinte, a group of grasses that grows wild in many areas of Mexico.[2] It was once believed that the original wild corn was extinct. He also led a team of botanists who discovered a new species of Teosinte in western Mexico, Zea diploperennis.[3]

Another of Iltis's discoveries occurred in 1962, while he and Don Ugent were on a plant collecting expedition in Peru. Iltis spotted a wild tomato that had never been classified by taxonomists before, which he noted as No. 832. He sent samples and seeds to a variety of specialists in the field and collected specimens for several herbariums. This wild tomato turned out to be a new species of tomato with much higher sugar and solids content than domestically grown tomatoes. As a source for hybridization with domestic tomatoes, it has been used both to improve the flavor of tomatoes and to boost solids content.[4]

Iltis is an uncompromising and outspoken environmentalist and conservationist, a champion of preserving endangered and threatened habitats to preserve biodiversity. Some species of teosinte are critically endangered, and all face the loss of habitat as agricultural land use expands in Mexico. Thanks to Iltis's efforts, the government of Mexico has devoted resources to conserving the habitat of Zea diploperennis.

  1. Turda M and PJ Weindling, eds. 2007. "Blood and Homeland": Eugenics and racial nationalism in Central and Southeast Europe 1900-1940. Budapest; NY: Central European University Press.
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