Listán Prieto (not to be confused with Listán Negro) is a red grape variety that is believed to be originated from the Castilla-La Mancha region in Spain. Listán Prieto has disappeared from Spain mainland, but there are still 29 ha planted on the Canary Islands in 2008.J. Robinson et.al. Wine Grapes, A complete guide to 1,368 vine varieties, including their origins and flavours, pp. 550–552 Penguin Books 2012
In 2007, DNA fingerprinting done by the Centro Nacional de Biotecnología in Madrid, Spain discovered that the Mission grape that was widely planted in the earliest New World vineyards in the Americas was a genetic match to Listán Prieto. Despite the genetic match, there is enough clonal variation that has occurred over the centuries of geographical separation that the Mission grape of the Americas and the Listán Prieto grape of the Canary Islands are classified by the Vitis International Variety Catalogue as two separate grape varieties.VIVC " Mission entry " Accessed: December 27th, 2010VIVC " Listan negro " Accessed: December 27th, 2010 Part of the variation is likely because some of earliest plantings by the Spanish missionaries were from grape seedsA. Bespaloff Complete Guide to Wine, pp. 191–194 Penguin Books 1994 which are the result of pollination and sexual propagation and thus more likely to have slight differences from the parent vine than propagation through cuttings.J. Robinson (ed) "The Oxford Companion to Wine" Third Edition, p. 729 Oxford University Press 2006
|
|