J.T.---I would definitely listen to Willard....he IS in Mexico
I have listened to Willard -- he's a great source for a lot of info. Unfortunately, the question remains: is there a list of varieties of peppers from Mexico, within information on which states they came from? It turns out, this doesn't look like can be answered easily. It would be nice to have a straighforward "Yes, and you can find this all at
X", or even something like, "No, I've done a thorough search of
X, Y, and
Z, and it just doesn't look like it." But actually, neither of those two answers would be honest or accurate. There are around
two hundred listed with a Mexican origin by
www.thechileman,org alone, which is a helluva lot
more than can be found at the CGN. The USDA's GRIN/NPGS system gives a whole
lot more results (around 905) for varieties of
Capsicum having something to do with 'Mexico', but most of these are from
New Mexico (not the old one), and no strong effort was made to sort them by state, anyways. This latter number makes a lot more sense for the region where peppers have been grown and eaten for 7500 years. The problem is that this level of detail still isn't all that satisfying; local peppers in the remote highlands of Oaxaca and Chiapas aren't going to reflect what's growing in the lush tropics of Quintana Roo or Yucatan, let alone the much drier states of Chihuaha or Sonora. Yes, there will be some that will be more prevalent, but it's the local ones I'm after, and for that, you need a national inventory of some sort.
Another source might be
National Vegetable Germplasm Bank, Mexico (BANGEV, UACH), since these guys would undoubtedly have much of the actual materials cataloged, but I haven't been able to navigate them well enough to find a list (I'm getting better at Spanish, but it's still a distant fourth language.)
Any ideas?