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Published bySteven Leo Wilkinson Modified over 9 years ago
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Food Plants
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For Love of the Potato
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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
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Benefits of the Potato
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Van Gogh – The Potato Eaters
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Ukrainian Food Potato PancakesBorsch
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Potato Vodka
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Young potato plant with early stage of late blight
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Dried potato leaf infected with late blight – Phytophthora infestans
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Potato tubers with Late Blight
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Potato field infected with late blight – Infection started in center of field
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Severity of blight and famine
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Cartoon of Irish “Bogtrotters” circa 1840’s
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Irish family digging Potatoes - 1847
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Irish family potato dinner - 1846
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Irish food riots - 1847
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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
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Ethnobotany and Domesticated Plants Wheat
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First ethnobotanical rule of food production In indigenous agriculture where the crops are consumed and not sold, there evolves and is maintained a reasonable level of nutritional adequacy
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Second ethnobotanical rule of food production In indigenous agriculture where the crops are grown mainly or only for sale, there develops an expanding surplus of food. The overall objective of such agricultural systems is to replace a pre-existing (natural) plant community with a cultivator-made community
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It then follows that: If the potentially unstable increase in food production and human population is to be maintained, it must be consistent with three aims: 1. To operate at a maximum profit (labor/yield). 2. To minimize year-to-year instability in production. 3. To operate so as to prevent long-term degradation of the production capacity of the agricultural system.
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Mexican Corn Varieties
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Darwin on Artificial Selection “Although man did not cause variability and cannot even prevent it, he can select, preserve, and accumulate the variations given to him by the hand of nature almost in any way which he chooses; and thus can certainly produce a great result… Selection by man may be followed either methodically and intentionally, or unconsciously and unintentionally… We can further understand how it is that domestic races of plants often exhibit an abnormal character, as compared to natural species, for they have been modified not for their own benefit, but for that of man.”
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Heirloom tomatoes
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Heritage Animal Varieties
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Street in Cuzco, Peru with advertisement for California seeds
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Plant Germ Plasm The first category of germ plasm includes the native or indigenous varieties of cultivated crop plants used elsewhere in commercial agricultural production. At present many of the major crop plants have a limited genetic base, as these have been developed through a series of selections that emphasize yield often at the expense of insect or disease resistance, environmental tolerance, multiple use, etc.
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Spread of Southern Corn Leaf Blight
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Southern Corn Leaf Blight
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Close up of Southern Corn Leaf Blight
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Southern Corn Leaf Blight – damage to ear
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Sweet Potato
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Healthy Sweet Potatoes – Ipomoea batatas
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Sweet potatoes with black rot
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Sweet potatoes with soft rot
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Sweet potatoes with russet crack
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Sweet potato attacked by nematodes
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Sweet potato with stem rot Healthy sweet potato
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Plant Germ Plasm The second category of germ plasm material includes the identification and collection of wild relatives of the more commonly cultivated plants.
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Wild Tomato Species Genus Lycoperiscon Domestic High Altitude Another L. chmielewskii
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Plant Germ Plasm The third category includes plants not yet in the economic system and not related to domesticated plants. These may have properties of great value to us, but these can be very difficult to identify.
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Seed and germplasm storage facility – Kew Seed Bank
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New Zealand – Maori sweet potato culturing
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Breadfruit
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Diane Ragone Checking Breadfruit Collection in Hawaii
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New Food From Old Aztec threshing Amaranth – Florentine Codex – 16 th Century
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Amaranthus hypocondriacus Amaranthaceae
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Amaranth harvest in Sierra Madre, Mexico
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Amaranth seed balls for sale in market, Sierra Madre
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Aztec God Huitzilopochtli
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Amaranth culture in US today
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More Amaranth Species A. cruentus A. caudatus
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Triticale On left – wheat, triticale, rye
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The Trouble with Tribbles
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Star fruit – Averrhoa carambola
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Pinyon Pine – Pinus edulis
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Stone Pine – Pinus pinea
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Pine nuts or pignoli – from Pinus edulis
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Kiwi Fruit – Actinidia chinensis
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Kiwi fruit cultivation
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Taro – Colocasia esculenta
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Taro harvest - Hawaii
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Taro corms
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Tamarind – Tamarindus indica
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Tamarind Fruits
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Tamarind based sauces
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Tamarinido Drinks
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