Native Americans have made a great impact on the world of agriculture, especially in New Mexico. There are around 23 tribes in New Mexico alone, 3 of them are Apache tribes and the 19 left are considered pueblos. Though there was a specific group called the Comanche that used to live in New Mexico, mainly in the Eastern parts of the lands, they were considered part of The Plains Indians, that dominated the Great Plains, which constituted most of the Pueblo Indians, essentially the Comache were actually part of the Pueblo, but they were an sort of early version. The Comanche Indians had two main ways of agriculture, the first of them was just hunting and raising cattle and sheep, there was also a bunch of buffalo that used to hunt as well. As for the second type of agriculture they used to focus on The Three Sisters, of farming, which was Corn, Beans, and Squash. This system serves as the basis for intercropping systems currently being used around the world as tools to increase agricultural productivity in areas facing food shortages. Each of the three sisters' serves an important role and supports and benefits the others. There was actually a fourth sister found in the SouthWest of New Mexico, called the Rocky Mountain bee plant. Often growing near former Ancestral Pueblo settlements this two-to-five-foot tall, pink flowered cleome is a powerful attractant for beneficial insects that pollinate beans and squash