Classification and ID, Ch 2, -33 With the trends toward globalization, and the “world getting smaller” a uniform system of naming plants is needed. Carl.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1.2 Glossary Aesthetic Pertaining to a sense of beauty or to aesthetics. Agriculture The broad industry engaged in the production of plants and animals.
Advertisements

Module #6 Forage Selection Pine Silvopasture in the Southeast.
Today's Lecture Classification of vegetables
Crop Plant Reproduction (p and chapter 4)
Human impact on the environment In this lesson you will learn about: the biological control of pest species the use of GM crops as an alternative to using.
C I M M Y T MR International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center The Importance of Rotations and Green Manure Cover Crops in CA Walter Mupangwa.
Origin of Domesticated Plants Wheat. Most domesticated food plants have been selected for: large plant parts soft edible tissue thick flesh with intense.
GENETIC RESOURCES: Resources that contain all genetic variability found in a particular plant species This includes its wild relatives; m ost of them.
Jake Stuckey.  Cover Crops: Are crops planted between main crops to prevent erosion or to enrich the soil. A Cocktail cover crop is a mixture of different.
Animal, Plant & Soil ScienceAnimal, Plant & Soil Science E1-1 The Importance of Plant Science.
Tuesday Lecture – Cereal Grains
Crops Mr. Wisness.
Agronomy. Grains Amber Durum Wheat (Triticum durum) Buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum) Flax (Linum usitatissimum) Flint Corn (Zea mays) Grain Sorghum (Sorghum.
Crops in Agriculture Corrin Breeding Plant and Soil Computers in Agriculture.
Tanaman Makanan Food Crops AGR What are food crops? Any domesticated or wild species of any plant parts that are used for human or animal consumption.
HFA 4C Nutrition and Health- Mrs. M. fILINOV
CROP HUSBANDRY 5.1 Describe the major cropping systems.
Corn Video Different types of corn at called “Races.”
CANOLA PRODUCTION IN NYERI, KENYA Paige Cross. Canola -- Brassica napus  Edible rapeseed developed in Canada in 1970s  Two main varieties: Argentine.
Rye Grass Ag Education II Rye Grass What do you know about rye grass? How many kinds of rye grass are there? Where is it grown? Why is rye grass important?
Alfalfa (Medicago sativa). Sericea Lespedeza (Lespedeza cuneata)
A member of CGIAR consortium Climate change research at IITA Michael Abberton Head, Genetic Resources Centre IITA, Ibadan.
Nursery Production 3 Commercial Plant Production.
Grain Crops Topic #2085 Josh Miller.
Food: An Ecosystem Perspective Biology 101 Laboratory Biology and Society Laboratory Exercise 10.
Harvest © 2015 albert-learning.com Harvest. © 2015 albert-learning.com Harvest Harvest is the process of gathering mature crops from the fields. Reaping.
Plant Classification -a means of grouping plants according to their similarities.
FAMILY POACEAE (GRASS FAMILY) Cereals and Grasses (25% of vegetation) 600 genera and 8,500 species Wheat (Triticum vulgare) Rice (Oryza sativa) Barley.
Crops and Crop Production in North Dakota Joel Ransom.
LESSON 5 Growing Oats. NEXT GENERATION SCIENCE/COMMON CORE STANDARDS ADDRESSED!  CCSS.ELA-Literacy.RST Translate quantitative or technical information.
PRT 2008 Lecture 8. Genetic resources Genetic material of actual or potential value.
Section:Plant & Soil Science Section:Plant & Soil Science Unit:Soil Management Unit:Soil Management Lesson Title: Use of Cropping Systems for Fertility.
KENT A MCVAY CROPPING SYSTEMS SPECIALIST SOUTHERN AG RESEARCH CENTER MONTANA STATE UNIVERSITY Crop Rotation Benefits.
Uses of Plants Plant Science.
Pulses or legumes Peas and Beans. Fabaceae Second most important family for humans A combination of grain and pulses is seen in major civilization –Barley.
Plant and Soil Science. Recognizing the Importance of Plant and Soil Science.
Intro to Agronomy Agronomy –Specialization of agriculture concerned w/ the theory & practice of field-crop production & soil management. The scientific.
Mrs. Schaffner. the science and technology of producing and using plants for food, fuel, feed, fiber, and reclamation.
200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300 pt.
Grain Oil and Specialty Field-Crop Production. Field Crops  450 million acres in the U.S. (20% of U.S. land)
The Role of Cultivated Plants in the Living World Crop Science 1 Fall 2004.
Seeds and Beans. Blackeye beans or Cowpeas Cranberry bean.
Origin of Some Domestic animals and Plant Species.
Alfalfa (Medicago sativa). Introduction Known as the “queen of forages” Alfalfa(Medicago L.), also called Lucerne Originated near Iran First introduced.
Organic farming is a system which do not use synthetic inputs such as chemical fertilizers, pesticides, hormones and relies on crop rotations, crop residues,
Introduction to Horticulture. Importance of Plants As a table, determine what the top five crops (in terms of amount produced) are in Minnesota. As a.
Plants in Human Culture Learning Target: Primary Plant Food Groups
Agronomic Crops.
Linnaeus. Levetin,E. and McMahon,K. (2003) Plants and Society. McGraw Hill; Boston.
Cropping systems, Cropping patterns ABT-320
Plant Classification. Classification Systems  Climatic  Warm Season  Cool Season  Tropical  Use  Agronomic  Horticultural  Ornimental  Taxonomic.
Agriculture Specialist Fact Cards. Rice Rice thrives in tropical areas. Rice thrives in tropical areas. It arrived in the North America in It arrived.
August 2008 Grain, Oil, and Specialty Field- Crop Production By Larry Stine Estherville Lincoln Central High School Original Power Point created by Larry.
Unit 2: Crop Plant Classification and Identification
AGSC 231 Principles of Agronomy CLASSIFICATION OF CROPS By S.K. Yau (revised Feb 2010)
Powering the Future: Biofuels. Activity: Biofuel feedstocks Classify biofuel feedstocks Compare biofuel feedstocks Suggest the pros and cons of biofuel.
Unit 21 grain and oil crops Field crops in the United States is very Important. Field crops take up 450 million acres in this country, that accounts for.
Seed 2. Alfalfa Barley Bean (dry) Bermuda Grass.
Soil Water Management Through Cropping Systems Chris Augustin NDSU Soil Health Extension Specialist
Introduction to Plant Science & Plant Classification .
Grains(Cereals) for food and feed
Chapter 1: BIOMASS RESOURCES & CHARACTERISTICS OF BIOFUELS
All plants have these four organs
Agronomic management and how we improve production
Agriculture Chapters 9.
Ch. 27 – What is a Plant? Pg. 559 Why do you & I need plants?
Agronomy Seeds.
Learning the Importance of Field Crops
Forage Selection Pine Silvopasture in the Southeast 4/5/
Biodiversity in Agroecosystems
Presentation transcript:

Classification and ID, Ch 2, -33 With the trends toward globalization, and the “world getting smaller” a uniform system of naming plants is needed. Carl Linnaeus is recognized as the person who initiated the scientific [botanical, or binomial] system of classification

The binomial system -34 Genus, species, classifier Example: Vigna unguiculata, Walp.  Or Vigna unguiculata, Wallp  When you write scientific names of plants, you will be expected to italicize, or underline the genus and species terms (!)

Botanical Classification -33 Kingdom – Plantae Division – Magnoliophyta Class !  Lilliopsida (Monocots) !  Magnoliopsida (Dicots) ! Subclass Order

Bot. Classification, cont. -33 This is where it gets practical [know] Family !  Poaceae (Gramineae)  Fabaceae (Leguminoseae) Genus ! Species ! Subspecies Variety

Important Crop Families Fabaceae - legumes 2. Poaceae - grasses 3 Brassicaceae – mustards 4. Solanaceae – nightshade, potato 9. Malvaceae – mallow family (e.g. cotton) 12. Convovulaceae – morning glory family

Scientific names of crops we need to know, first the cereals -35 Barley – Hordeum vulgare L. Maize – Zea mays L. Oats – Avena sativa L. Rice – Oryza sativa L. Rye – Secale cereale L. Sorghum – Sorghum bicolor (Moench) Wheat, bread – Triticum aestivum L.

Sci. names of crops to know, oil and protein -35 Bean, com./field – Phaseolus vulgaris L. Cowpea – Vigna spp. Peanut – Arachis hypogaea L. Pigeonpea – Cajanus cajan Millsp. Soybean – Glycine max Merr. Sunflower – Helianthus annuus L.

Sci. names of crops to know - 35 Root and Tuber  Cassava – Manihot esculenta Crantz  Potato – Solanum tuberosum L.  Sweet potato – Ipomoea batatas L.  Yams – Dioscorea spp. Sugar  Sugarcane – Saccharum officinarum L.  Sugarbeet – Beta vulgaris L.

Sci. names of crops to know -35 Fiber  Cotton, upland – Gossypium hirsutum L.  Kenaf – Hibiscus cannabinus L. Drug/Medicinal  Tobacco – Nicotiana tabacum L.  Hemp – Cannabis sativa L.

Forages - 36 Very important for feed, crop rotations, erosion control, environmental enhancements (landscaping)... But not a focus of this course

Other Categories of Life -36 Taxonomists proposing five kingdoms:  Monera – bacteria  Protista – protozoa and algae  Fungi – [true] fungi  Plantae – Plants  Animalia – multicellular animals (insects/worms/mammals)  (more)

Monera -37 Unicellular Reproduce by cell division (binary fission) Most abundant organism, most environments Include Ps and non-Ps bacteria Usually saprophytes or parasites

Monera, in agriculture -37 Breakdown of residues, pesticides,wastes Nutrient recycling Causative agents for plant diseases Improvement of soil structure via decomp. Nitrogen Fixation Biological control (diseases of pests)

Protista -37 Unicellular and multicellular (e.g. algae) Ps and non-Ps, in moist environments  (Includes marine plankton) Algae is seen as basis of food chains and health of aquatic ecosystems

Fungi - 37 No Ps Saprophytes and parasites Reproduce by fission, budding, spores Includes molds, yeasts, mushrooms and pathogens  (More)

Fungi, agriculturally -37 Breakdown of residues, pesticides, wastes Nutrient recycling Causative agent for many diseases Improves soil structure, via decomp. Biological control of pests Improves absorption of nutrients (mycorrhizae)

Viruses -38 Only reproduce in living cells (Non-living) Agriculturally important:  Causative agent for diseases  Biological control of pests

Place of Origin -38 Origin of species defined as geographic area with greatest diversity of that species Nikolai Vavilov credited with concept Important to plant breeders who are seeking rare genetic traits Jack Harlan did more recent classifications and reclassifications

Vavilov’s Centers of Origin CenterImp’t Species  ChineseSoybean  IndianRice  Central AsiaWheat  MediterraneanWhite Clover  EthiopiaSorghum  Central AmericaMaize  South AmericaPotato, Peanuts

Broad categories, based on origin Indigenous – natives Exotic – introduced to area, intentionally or unintentionally (e.g., kudzu, cogongrass)  Problem of invasives costing millions $$

Species Native Western Hem.-39 Prairie grasses – many Common Bean Maize Papaya Peanut Potato Sunflower Sweet Potato Switchgrass Tobacco Tomato

Classification: Agronomic Use -39 Grain – any crop grown for its seed for animal feed or human food Cereal – grass grown for its edible seed ! Small Grain – small-seeded species of grain crops Pulse – legume grown for its edible seed ! Forages: Hay=cut, cured; Silage=forage preserved in succulent condition via fermentation; Greenchop =cut, fed fresh (soilage)

Specific Agronomic Use/1 ! -40 Catch – replaces failed crops Nurse – sown to help establish another Companion – crops grown in association Cover – protects soil, conserves nutrients Supplementary – crops grown to increase production in unfavorable periods Green manure – crop incorporated to improve soil fertility

Specific Agronomic Use/2 ! 40 Seed – any crop grown to produce seed for planting Trap – crop used to attract insects or parasites Oil – crops grown for oil content Fiber – crops grown for paper or textiles

Terms in Cropping Systems -40 Crop Rotation ! – yearly succession of crops – opposite of “monocropping” Fallow – two types  Summer – to conserve moisture  Bush – to restore nutrients

Sole cropping vs monocropping Clarification – Sole crop means only “one species in a field at one time” – e.g. most US grown row crops are “sole” cropped. Not so in limited input farming where farmers will intercrop (“consorcio”) as a risk reduction practice. Opposite of intercropping. Monocropping is “over time,” opposite of rotation

Life Cycle/ Annuals – complete entire life cycle and die in one year  Spring annuals – grow and mature in spring (e.g., oats, spring wheat)  Summer annuals – plant in spring, harvest in fall (e.g., soybeans, peanuts)  Winter annuals – planted in fall, vernalized, harvest following spring (winter wheat, winter barley, winter rye)

Life Cycle/2 (cont.) - 41 Biennials – typically require two growing seasons to complete life cycle, requiring vernalization (e.g., sweetclover, carrot, turnip, sugarbeet) Perennials – indefinite life period, do not die after reproduction

ID of common plants -42

Vernation, imp’t in grass ID -43

Inflorescence types -45

Three most common -45

Inflorescence types -45 Spike (e.g. wheat, rye, barley) Raceme (pearl millet) Panicle (rice, oats) Head (red clover, white clover)

Common Field Crops, Cereals -45 Maize (corn), Zea mays  Annual  Flower type – imperfect (monoecious) a major problem in marginal and unpredictable ppt environments  Types: Dent, Flint, Flour, Pop, Pod, Sweet  Grain about 9% protein  Ethanol (now)

Grain Sorghum, -46 There are several types of sorghum, however Sorghum bicolor is Grain & Forage grown in US. Life cycle – KLB believes it to be short-lived perennial – it behaves like a perennial – it “rattoons” and it has a dormancy mechanism (note!) Quite drought-tolerant (perfect flowers) Efficient user of moisture – TR of about 325 Protein is not well balanced, and only ~8%, with feeding value of 85-90% of corn

Small Grains -46 All germinate under cool temps, can be grown where ppt is limited  Barley (Hordeum vulgare), primarily malt and feed uses  Oats (Avena sativa), among highest quality grains, ~14% and proven cholesterol reducer (Cheerios) also, primary nurse crop to est. forages  Rye (Secale cereale), most winter hardy of group  Wheat, most important and valued (see next)

Wheat, (½) -47 Common wheat is Triticum aestivum and is hexaploid (6N) – bread and pastries ~14% protein Durum wheat is Triticum durum and is known as “semolina” or spaghetti wheat and is highest protein % of cereals ~17, it is tetraploid (4N) Winter wheat requires “vernalization”

Wheat (2/2) -47 Market classes of wheat  Hard red winter – bread -highest yielder (req. vern)  Hard red spring - bread  Soft red winter – (req. vernalization)  White – pastry and biscuit (lowest protein)  Durum – semolina (highest protein)  Mixed  Note: spring wheats are the Green Revolution wheats

Barley - 48 Two major types:  Six-row – Hordeum vulgare  Two-row – Hordeum distichum There are hulled (lemma and palea attached to caryopsis after harvest) and hull-less types

Rye -49 Winter and spring types Hardiest and most tolerant of small grains Grain may contain fungus (Ergot) which can be recognized – gives meal “fishy” smell Cover crop in SE, protects soil and conserves nutrients (environmental!)

Oats -49 Excellent food and feed – high protein Typically, dairy operations will have oats in program, as feed and to establish forages  Forage seed develop slowly, permitting weeds to get jump on them  Oats germinate under cool temps and grow quickly, shading out the weeds, but permitting the forage to get started  Straw value can be substantial

Rice - 50 Several types (polished rice ~8% protein):  japonica – paddy (irrigated) – Green Revolution rice – short, sticky kernels/cooked  indica – upland – slender, dry kernels/cooked  javanica  African (Nerica) – recent yield breakthrough  Oryzae glabberima – Floating rice  Note that wild rice is not Oryzae, but Zizania

Pulse Crops - 50 Fix their own nitrogen! Are high protein, typically 17-25% Tend to be susceptible to pests None have had jumps in yield and many had acreage losses to Green Revolution crops

Soybeans (Glycine max) -50 Highest in protein ~38% Also an oil crop – 18-20% Vegetable types known as Edamame Healthy food, among other benefits, contains “lecithin” – an emulsifier or lubricant in foods and pharmaceuticals Currently, candidate for “biofuel” When used in crop rotation, contributes about one lb. nitrogen per bushel produced, to next crop

Peanut (Arachis hypogaea) Also known as “groundnut” Here in FL, most data indicates no response to fertilization Oil content (biofuel!) is ~40% Protein is ~20 US Farmers grow as “quota” crop, or “additionals”

Other pulses – 51 + Cowpeas (Vigna unguiculata) – grows well in hot, humid environments Field beans (Phaseolus vulgaris) –prefers cool environments, lots of pests Field peas (Pisum sativum) – grows well under cool temps Lentils (Lens culinaris)

Oil crops – 52 + Sunflower (Helianthus annuus), native US  Unlikely to see GMO sunflower in near future  Major restriction in SE – Alternaria Sesame Safflower Canola (Soybeans and peanuts)

Sugar crops –53 + Sugar beets (Beta vulgaris)  Biennial  Sugar and feed Sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum)  Perennial, rattoons  Sugar and ethanol

Fiber -54 Cotton, several types (Gossypium hirsutum) is “upland cotton” grown in US Seed contains anti-metabolite Gossypol Probably most tolerant common crop to saline soils (an increasing problem) Historically, more pesticides used than any other crop, per acre

Text pages not in quiz The forages, while very important, are not the focus of this course. The forage information starting on page 54, thru 64, will not be on the quizzes or final exam. The following questions from the Self- Evaluation Test are not candidates for quizzes: Items 10, 11, 18, 19, 20, & 25. This info is posted in corridor outside 2196

Specific Agronomic Use/3 ! -40 Sugar – crops producing sucrose Drug/Medicinal/Stimulant Biofuel – crops grown to produce fuel, to be used directly or thru conversion to liquid

Moving = View, Slide Sorter, Then click and drag.