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Food Plants

Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

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Page 1: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Food Plants

Page 2: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Forage Grasses

Page 3: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Page 4: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Kentucky Blue Grass

Page 5: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Timothy – Phleum pratense

Page 6: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Fescues – Festuca sp.

Page 7: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Big Bluestem – Andropogon gerardii

Page 8: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Little Bluestem – Andropogon scoparius

Page 9: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Blue Grama – Bouteloua gracilis

Page 10: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Switchgrass – Panicum virgatum

Page 11: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses
Page 12: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Legumes

Page 13: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Legumes

• Legumes are members of pea, bean family (Fabaceae) and are very important sources of food due to their highly nutritious seeds

• Legume seeds are very high in protein due to the nitrogen fixing root nodules with which legumes can extract N2 gas to make ammonium which they use when synthesizing protein

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Page 15: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Protein content various foods

Page 16: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Soybeans

Page 17: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Soybean – Glycine max

Page 18: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Tofu – Bean Curd

Page 19: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Soy milk

Page 20: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Soy sauce

Page 21: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Edamame

Page 22: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Miso – soybean paste

Page 23: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Starchy Staples

Page 24: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Top agricultural products, by crop types(million metric tons) 2004 data

Cereals 2,263Vegetables and Melons 866

Roots and Tubers 715Milk 619Fruit 503Meat 259

Oilcrops 133Fish (2001 estimate) 130

Eggs 63Pulses 60

Vegetable Fiber 30Source:Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)[

Page 25: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Top agricultural products, by individual crops(million metric tons) 2004 data

Sugar Cane 1,324Maize 721Wheat 627Rice 605

Potatoes 328Sugar Beet 249Soybeans 204

Oil Palm Fruit 162Barley 154Tomato 120

Source:Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)

Page 26: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Plant Storage Organs

Some examples of storage organs in plants: (a) tap root of carrot (Daucus carota); (b) bulb of onion (Allium sp.); (c) corm of crocus (Crocus sp.); (d) rhizome of iris (Iris sp.); (e) root tuber of dahlia (Dahlia sp.); (f) stem tuber of potato (Solanum tuberosum).

Page 27: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Plant Storage Organs

• Rhizomes – are horizontal stems that are underground – reduced scale-like leaves are present on the surface of the rhizome and adventitious roots form on its underside – buds found at the nodes can give rise to new plants – ginger and iris

• Tubers – are enlarged storage tips of a rhizome – the white potato is a tuber – the eyes of a potato are actually buds located at its nodes and each bud can give rise to a new plant

• Bulbs and Corms are modified stems found in monocots – Bulbs are erect underground stems with both fleshy and papery leaves; food is stored in the fleshy leaves – Onions, tulips, daffodils, hyacinths, and lilies all have bulbs

Page 28: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Plant Storage Organs

• Corms store food reserves in the stem, not the leaves – they are erect underground stems are covered only with dry papery leaves – corms can multiply by producing small corms – plants with corms are gladiolus, crocus and taro

• Tuberous roots are modified fibrous roots that have become fleshy and enlarged with food reserves – they can also function in asexual reproduction – tuberous begonias, dahlias and sweet potatoes

• Taproots may also function as food storage organs – especially for biennial plants like carrots, rutabaga and turnips

Page 29: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Starchy Rhizome - Ginger

Page 30: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Tuber – White Potato

Page 31: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Tuber – Planting Seed Potato

Page 32: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Bulb – the Onion

Page 33: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Bulb – Tulip with Offsets (new bulbs)

Page 34: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Corm - Gladiolus

Page 35: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Tuberous Roots – Sweet Potato

Page 36: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Taproots – Carrots and Turnips

Page 37: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

For Love of the Potato

Page 38: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

New Foods to Europe

• Alfred Crosby has gathered data which suggests the introduction of maize and potatoes alone allowed the doubling of Europe’s population in the period after Columbus’ discovery of America

• Corn was important because of the very high yields possible from corn agriculture

Page 39: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

New Foods to Europe

• Potatoes were important because, unlike corn, they provided a complete set of amino acids (corn lacks lysine) - potatoes were great for poor people in Europe because they can be easily grown in areas of poor, depleted soil, they will grow well during a short growing season (typical of northern Europe) and they can even be left in the ground if necessary, so they are less sensitive to the timing of the harvest than competing poor-soil crops, such as rye, which must be harvested when the seeds are ripe or it will rot

Page 40: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

The Potato Comes to Europe

• The potato came to Europe about 1565 - at first, most people in Europe, including the Irish, used the potato as a back up for grain production, but by the end of the 17th century, it had become an important winter food; by the mid-eighteenth century it was a general field crop and provided the staple diet of small farmers during most of the year

Page 41: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Ukrainian Food

Potato Pancakes Borsch

Page 42: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Potato Vodka

Page 43: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Benefits of the Potato

Page 44: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Van Gogh – The Potato Eaters

Page 45: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses
Page 46: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Cartoon of Irish “Bogtrotters” circa 1840’s

Page 47: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Young potato plant with early stage of late blight

Page 48: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Dried potato leaf infected with late blight – Phytophthora infestans

Page 49: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Potato tubers with Late blight

Page 50: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Potato field infected with late blight – Infection started in center of field

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Page 52: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Severity of blight and famine

Page 53: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Irish family diggingPotatoes - 1847

Page 54: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Irish family potato dinner - 1846

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Irish food riots - 1847

Page 56: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Irish food sent to England – 1847 or 1848

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Lessons learned?

“Whatever may be the misfortunes of Ireland, the potato is not implicated. It, on the contrary, has more than done its duty, in giving them bones and sinew cheap ... There is no other crop equal to the potato in the power of sustaining life and health.”

- Bain 1848

Page 58: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Sweet potato tuberous roots

Page 59: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Origin of Sweet Potato

• Sweet Potato – Ipomoea batatas – was first domesticated in Peru about 5 or 6 thousand years ago – its culture spread through out South and Central America and the Caribbean region

• The Arawak People called it batata which became corrupted into the word potato

• It was brought to Europe by Columbus around 1500

Page 60: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Sweet Potato – Ipomoea batatas

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Sweet Potato

• Sweet potato is a tuberous root cultivated by vegetative propagation (cuttings)

• It was a staple food throughout the Americas and also across the Polynesian islands – big question is how did it get to Polynesia – by people or by accident?

Page 62: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Plans for a balsawood raft – used along coast ofSouth America-drawn by F.E. Paris in 1841

Page 63: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Thor Heyerdahl’s balsa wood raft – 1947 in action and model

Page 64: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Possible Inca route to Pacific Islands and Kon-Tiki route

Page 65: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Polynesians to South America?

• It is more likely that Polynesians crossed the Pacific and obtained sweet potatoes directly from the South Americans

• In most parts of the South Pacific, sweet potatoes are called kumara, very similar to the Peruvian word of cumara

• However, in Hawaii, the sweet potato is called ‘uala, more similar to the Columbian word kuala - perhaps a couple of groups were in contact with South America

Page 66: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Polynesian Ships in Tahiti

Page 67: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Sweet Potato Agriculture• Sweet Potato is rich in carbohydrates, vitamins and

minerals – some of the carbohydrates are in the form of sugars rather than starch, hence the sweet taste

• About 50% more calories than white potato, but slightly less protein

• Two main varieties – a drier, starchier yellow-fleshed variety and a moister, sweeter, deeper orange variety

• China dominates sweet potato cultivation, but also important in Japan and several African countries; increasing production in US

Page 68: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Sweet Potato Cultivation

Page 69: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Manihot or Cassava – Manihot esculenta

Page 70: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Cassava

• Cassava (Manihot esculenta), also called yucca or manioc, is a woody shrub of the Euphorbiaceae family

• It is cultivated as an annual crop in many parts of the tropical world because it has a starchy tuberous root that is a major source of carbohydrates

Page 71: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Cassava• The cassava root is long and tapered, with a

firm homogeneous flesh encased in a detachable rind, about 1 mm thick, rough and brown on the outside.

• Cassava roots are very rich in starch, and contain significant amounts of calcium (50 mg/100g), phosphorus (40 mg/100g) and vitamin C (25 mg/100g). However, they are poor in protein and other nutrients.

Page 72: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Cassava Roots

Page 73: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Cassava Agriculture

• Wild populations of M. esculenta subspecies flabellifolia, shown to be the progenitor of domesticated cassava, are centered in west-central Brazil where it was likely first domesticated no more than 10,000 years ago

• With its high food potential, it had become a staple food of the native populations of northern South America, southern Mesoamerica, and the Caribbean by the time of the Spanish conquest, and its cultivation was continued by the colonial Portuguese and Spanish. Forms of the modern domesticated species can be found growing in the wild in the south of Brazil.

• There are several wild Manihot species

Page 74: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Moche Ceramic Cassava – 100 AD

Page 75: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Cassava Consumption

• Cassava is classified as "sweet" or "bitter" depending on the level of cyanogenic compounds; improper preparation of bitter cassava causes a disease called konzo.

• Cassava can be cooked in various ways. The soft-boiled root has a delicate flavor and can replace boiled potatoes in many uses: as an accompaniment for meat dishes, or made into soups, purees, stews, etc. Deep fried (after boiling or steaming), it can replace fried potatoes, with a distinctive flavor. Tapioca and foufou are made from the starchy cassava root flour.

Page 76: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Tapioca

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Global Cassava Production

Page 78: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Taro – Colocasia esculenta

Page 79: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Taro – Colocasia esculenta

• Taro is believed to have originated in Southeast Asia and spread west and east thousands of years ago – may have been cultivated very early by people in SE Asia – eventually reached tropical Africa and from there was brought to the West Indies and South America by slaves – today it is cultivated in the tropics where it thrives in wet, saturated soil conditions – propagated by planting corms

Page 80: Food Plants. Forage Grasses Alfalfa and Red Clover – Legumes, not grasses

Taro cultivation

• The corm is steamed, crushed and made into a dough, then allowed to ferment by microbes – the paste is then eaten with the fingers or rolled into small balls – this is the method for making poi – staple Hawaiian food

• Corms can also be prepared like potatoes – steamed, baked, roasted, or boiled

• Corm is about 25% carbohydrate (about 3% sugar), 2% protein and very little fat

• Good source of calcium due to presence of calcium oxalate crystals – will cause intense burning if eaten raw so must be cooked to break down the crystals

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Taro harvest - Hawaii

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Taro corms

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More Taro

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Poi