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Adapt vs Landrace - What's the difference?

adapt | landrace |

As a verb adapt

is to make suitable; to make to correspond; to fit or suit; to proportion.

As an adjective adapt

is adapted; fit; suited; suitable.

As a noun landrace is

any local variety of a domesticated animal or plant species that has adapted over time to its ecological and cultural environment (including, in some cases, its work).

adapt

English

Verb

(en verb)
  • To make suitable; to make to correspond; to fit or suit; to proportion.
  • To fit by alteration; to modify or remodel for a different purpose; to adjust: as, to adapt a story or a foreign play for the stage; to adapt an old machine to a new manufacture.
  • To make by altering or fitting something else; to produce by change of form or character: as, to bring out a play adapted from the French; a word of an adapted form.
  • To change oneself so as to be adapted.
  • They could not adapt to the new climate and so perished.

    Derived terms

    * adaptable * adaptation * adaptative * adapter * adaption * adaptitude * adaptly * adaptness * adaptor

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • Adapted; fit; suited; suitable.
  • (Jonathan Swift)

    References

    *

    landrace

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (often, attributive) Any local variety of a domesticated animal or plant species that has adapted over time to its ecological and cultural environment (including, in some cases, its work).
  • * 1961 , Breeds of Swine , Farmers' Bulletin No. 1263, US Department of Agriculture, page 7,
  • One of the newer breeds of swine in the United States is the American Landrace'. American '''Landrace''' hogs (figs. 19 and 20) are descendants of Danish ' Landrace hogs imported by the United States Department of Agriculture in 1934.
  • * 2009 , Pablo Eyzaguirre, Arwen Bailey, International case studies and tropical home gardens projects: offering lessons for a new research agenda in Europe'', A. Bailey, Pablo B. Eyzaguirre, L. Maggioni, ''Crop genetic resources in European home gardens: Proceedings of a Workshop , page 1,
  • First, many crop landraces in Europe are being lost without our even knowing what is being lost.
  • * 2011', A. C. Newton, ''et al.'', ''Cereal '''Landraces for Sustainable Agriculture'', Eric Lichtfouse, Marjolaine Hamelin, Philippe Debaeke, Mireille Navarrete (editors), ''Sustainable Agriculture , Volume 2, page 154,
  • In both cases the morphological diversity within the oat accessions did not differ between landraces and modern cultivars.

    Usage notes

    There is some overlap between the terms landrace and breed. The former is sometimes used in cases where selective breeding was the initial source of differentiation. The term is also sometimes used in the names of breeds based on landraces, even though the breed is itself not considered a landrace. Breeds also sometimes retain the name of the landrace from which they derived.

    Synonyms

    * (any domesticated animal or plant adapted to its new environment) natural breed (animal), traditional breed (animal), traditional variety (plant)

    See also

    * autochthonous * heirloom plant

    Anagrams

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