Bred for the West
You may have heard of the Plant Select® program—a collaboration between Denver Botanic Gardens, Colorado State University and green industry partners. Its mission is simple: to introduce plants that are not only beautiful, but also tough, water-wise and perfectly suited for gardens in the Intermountain West.
Behind the Scenes: How Denver Botanic Gardens Shapes Plant Select®
At the Gardens, we play a big role in this work. We trial new plants onsite (see an excellent overview of the process here), manage demonstration gardens at both York Street and Chatfield Farms, and offer Plant Select plants at our annual Spring Plant Sale.
But here’s something you may not know: the Gardens also helps discover and develop new plants for the program. With over 17,000 plant varieties in our living collections, we have an unmatched resource to draw from. In fact, more than 70% of Plant Select introductions begin here at Denver Botanic Gardens with our staff.
Better Plants for the Intermountain West
In recent years, our horticulture research team has launched a focused plant breeding program to create cultivars and unique varieties tailored for our region. Sometimes this means selecting naturally occurring traits from wild populations; other times it involves advanced tools that allow us to shape plant genetics more precisely.
Plant breeding is hardly new—it dates back nearly 10,000 years, when early farmers began selecting plants for better yield, flavor, or appearance. At its simplest, it’s just crossing two compatible plants to combine desirable traits. Over the last century, techniques such as mutagenesis and ploidy manipulation expanded what breeders could achieve, and today, gene editing and transgenics allow us to target traits with unprecedented accuracy.
At the Gardens, most of our work still relies on traditional breeding methods. That means crossing plants with traits we want to combine—say, the flower color of one species with the drought tolerance of another. By pairing a highly ornamental plant with a drought-hardy relative, we hope to create varieties that are both beautiful and better adapted to hot, dry conditions. It’s a long process, often requiring multiple generations before the right combination is achieved.
We also use mutagens, substances that can trigger changes in a plant’s genome. While these changes are random, they often produce predictable outcomes, such as compact growth, novel foliage color, or reduced fertility. We use this technique with plants that already have strong ornamental appeal and environmental tolerance but may benefit from a unique twist or refinement.
Beyond Beauty: Our Breeding Goals
Unlike ornamental horticulture at large, our breeding priorities go beyond aesthetics. We aim to develop plants that are not only striking in the garden, but also resilient in our increasingly harsh climate and supportive of pollinators and ecological health.
In other words, we’re not just breeding plants to survive here—we’re breeding them to thrive.
Gallery
Add new comment