The potato is a cool weather crop that has become an integral part of the world 's cuisine. Potatoes are originally from South America and have at least 200 different varieties. They were brought to Europe by the Spanish in the 16th century where they grew in popularity. Only one in four potatoes grown is actually eaten. Potatoes are used in the feeding of livestock, in the production of alcohol and starch. One damaging properties of the potato crop is blight. Blight is defined as a plant disease, caused by bacteria, fungi, or viruses, in which symptoms range from brownish blotches on the foliage to withering of the entire plant without rotting. This causes farmers to spray chemicals on crops up to 15 times in a growing season. As farmers began to look into ways to prevent against to disease, scientist initiated a study to create a blight resistant potato. Specific traits such as high yield or disease resistance were identified as traits to be altered. The process of breeding a hybrid line of potatoes was created that meet the desired character traits. There was success but it also limitations. One limitation occurred in the length of time to breed the potatoes. The process took up to 15 years. The new generation of potatoes varied from 3-5 years. Recent studies have shown wild potato plants grown in Central America, exhibit strong resistance to late blight disease. There was also a Dutch research program using GM techniques to insert wild potato genes into a European potato that has proven highly susceptible to late blight…
The potato contained starch. This was expected because I know a medium sized potato can contain up to 30 grams of carbohydrates.…
- The leafy stalk produces ears, which contain seeds called kernels. Though technically a grain, maize kernels are used in cooking as a vegetable or starch. The Olmec and Mayans cultivated it in numerous varieties throughout central and southern Mexico, cooked, ground or processed through nixtamalization. Between 1700 and 1250 BCE, the crop spread through much of the Americas. The region developed a trade network based on surplus and varieties of maize crops. After European contact with the Americas in the late 15th and early 16th centuries, explorers and traders carried maize back to Europe and introduced it to other countries.…
"By about 6,000 years ago, people in Mexico had domesticated a tropical grass called teosinte, beginning a process that would radically alter the plant, turning into maize, responsible for feeding people across the world today" (Zorich, 2015). As we know food today is much different than thousands of years ago in the lives of our ancestors. There have been many changes to our food that we consume today, especially in regards to corn. Everyone loves a sweet, tender "corn on the cob" in the summer time. Although this piece of food is delicious, it has been through numerous mutations to get to what is in modern society. By the 1400s, corn was a staple in the diet of those in Mexico and the Americas according to Jo Robinson' article (Robinson). The corn in the early days was to be known as Teosinte. It contained, little, sugar, a lot of starch and protein compared to the corn we see today, which is of a white, yellow color. The corn today lacks the nutrients, much of what teosinte contained.…
Centuries of geographic isolation had led to the divergent evolution of flora and fauna in North America and Europe. In the New World, Europeans encountered indigenous plant foods, often cultivated by Native Americans, such as potatoes, beans, squash, and maize (corn), probably the world's most important cereal crop. These plants carried back to Europe so enriched nutrition in the Old World that they stimulated…
When Europeans stumbled upon the New World, a variety of new flora had been discovered and exported back to Europe for use. One of these was maize or Indian corn. Maize was vitally important in Europe mainly because it offered a rich diet to not only people but animals as well. It was also an alternative to wheat (Old World food) because maize grows quickly and in places wheat can’t. Potatoes were also another major caloric-rich food discovered by Spanish conquistadores in 1536 in Peru. This plain vegetable revolutionized agriculture in Europe and was essential to European diet which became an important food for the lower class. Potatoes were so important that in later years during the 1800s when a potato famine hit Ireland, thousands of people…
In comparison to grains, another staple food crop, potatoes are more productive.…
Fruits, grains, legumes, tubers, vegetables, spice, and herbs are industrially cultivated and widely consumed and imported,…
Since I started playing football, I’ve come across teammates and coaches who fight through the effects of brain injuries on a daily basis. Those experiences alone helped me decide at a young age that I wouldn’t let my children play football. As a child, I wasn’t informed about head trauma and it continues to haunt me each day. I was just chasing a dream, hoping to change my family’s lifestyle and fortune. My children won’t need to risk their brains for this same goal, thanks to the benefits I’ve received from playing the sport professionally.…
To further provide extra and specific information, the researchers have decided to add the following questions as a guide in formulating the conclusion: Is potato a good source of electricity? How much voltage can a single potato have? Does the voltage depend on the size of the potato? Are there any more factors that would affect the voltage a potato can produce? If a potato can produce enough voltage, how many potatoes does it take to light a 0.70-volt bulb or three (3) 0.24-volt bulbs? Is it possible for potatoes to be utilized to sustain the electricity we have today?…
As this genetically modified food was not successful, now there is no commercial production of potato.…
One of the most recognizable snack foods is the potato chip. Who can resist this thin slice of potato, fried into a crisp then salted? Potato chips are delicious and very popular. They satisfy the taste buds of many by hitting all the essential characteristics of a good treat. They are convenient, easily found, salty, greasy, and come in a wide variety of flavors. It is hard to believe their invention was a mistake.…
The lumper fed Ireland for a time, but it also set the stage for human and economic ruin. Evolutionary theory suggests that populations with low genetic variation are more vulnerable to changing environmental conditions than are diverse populations. The Irish potato clones were certainly low on genetic variation, so when the environment changed and a potato disease swept through the country in the 1840s, the potatoes (and the people who depended upon them) were devastated.Thesis: The Irish Potato Famine devastated the Irish population and economy as well as sowing the seeds of rebellion against England.…
The most important crop to the Enga people is sweet potatoes, making up more than 60 percent of all production (Waddell, 1972). They receive most of their food from growing sweet potatoes in which they plant in mulch mounds. The mounds are formed by piling large amounts of grass and covering the grass with dirt (Wohlt, 2004). The mound size depends upon the size of elevation. The functions of the mounds are to protect against frost, which frequently occurs in high altitudes. Sweet potatoes mature in about 9 months. When the harvest is complete, they pull apart the mound and mulch with the leaves and old crop. Once the mulch starts to decompose, the mound is then rebuilt for new planting.…
The potato is a starchy, tuberous crop from the perennial Solanum tuberosum of the Solanaceae family (also known as the nightshades). The word may refer to the plant itself as well as the edible tuber. In the region of the Andes, there are some other closely related cultivated potato species. Potatoes were introduced outside the Andes region four centuries ago, and have become an integral part of much of the world's cuisine. It is the world's fourth-largest food crop, following rice, wheatand maize. Long-term storage of potatoes requires specialised care in cold warehouses.Wild potato species occur throughout the Americas, from the United States to southern Chile. The potato was originally believed to have been domesticated independently in multiple locations, but later genetic testing of the wide variety of cultivars and wild species proved a single origin for potatoes in the area of present-day southern Peru and extreme northwestern Bolivia (from a species in the Solanum brevicaule complex), where they were domesticated 7,000–10,000 years ago. Following centuries of selective breeding, there are now over a thousand different types of potatoes. Of these subspecies, a variety that at one point grew in the Chiloé Archipelago (the potato's south-central Chilean sub-center of origin) left its germplasm on over 99% of the cultivated potatoes worldwide.The annual diet of an average global citizen in the first decade of the 21st century included about 33 kg (73 lb) of potato. however, the local importance of potato is extremely variable and rapidly changing. It remains…