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Root crops

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Root crops David S. Seigler Department of Plant Biology University of Illinois Urbana, Illinois 61801 USA seigler_at_life.illinois.edu http://www.life.illinois.edu ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Root crops


1
Root crops
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David S. Seigler Department of Plant
BiologyUniversity of IllinoisUrbana, Illinois
61801 USAseigler_at_life.illinois.eduhttp//www.l
ife.illinois.edu/seigler
3
Root Crops - Outline
  • Botanical
  • o roots, rhizomes, corms, etc.
  • Domestication
  • o mostly asexual reproduction
  • o reduced toxicity
  • o increased size
  • Properties
  • Nutritional
  • Water
  • Starch
  • Minerals, vitamins
  • Preservation

4
Reading
  • CHAPTER 7 IN THE TEXT

5
Introduction
  • Root crops are underground parts of plants and
    include rhizomes, tubers, roots, stems, and
    leaves.
  • Other than in the U.S., Western Europe and Japan,
    root crops are usually hand harvested.

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  • Possibly domesticated before seed crops. Used by
    most hunter-gatherer societies.
  • Domestication has not affected many of them
    significantly. Usually larger size. Sometimes
    lower toxicity.

7
  • Used in all cultures, but only major in a few
    e.g., the potato in Europe, minor root crops in
    the Andes, and cassava in the lowland tropics.
  • About as much grown in terms of tonnage as cereal
    grains, but much less nutritional value.
  • The most important root crops are cassava,
    potato and sweet potato.

8
Crops from tubers and rhizomes
  • Difficult to estimate production of many of these
    as they are consumed locally.
  • Storage structures of plants.
  • Often reproduced vegetatively. Mostly water. Some
    minerals. Starch.
  • Used in most pre-agricultural cultures.
  • Only in a few cultures have these become major
    food crops, mostly at high elevations in the
    tropics or in the wet lowland tropics.

9
Root crops in market in Peru
Courtesy Nancy Hikes
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  • Mostly water and starch.
  • Shipping involves shipment of water.
  • Little protein or fats.
  • Most root crops spoil easily when harvested.

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Potatoes (Solanum tuberosum)
  • Potatoes (Solanaceae) and other related species
    were domesticated in Andean South America.
  • Cultivated at least 4000 years ago.
  • Potatoes will grow at elevations where few other
    crops can be cultivated.
  • The early Spanish found potatoes from Colombia to
    Chile.

12
Potatoes in market in Wolfenbuettel, Germany
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Potato field near Toluca, Mexico
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Potato, Solanum tuberosum, Solanaceae
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  • Either Sir Frances Drake or Sir Walter Raleigh
    brought back potatoes to England.
  • The potato was enthusiastically received into
    Ireland. The climate was particularly suited to
    growing potatoes. By the 1840's the Irish ate
    unbelievable quantities of potatoes.
  • In 1845, the potato blight (Phytophthora
    infestans) struck and wiped out the potato crop.
    Perhaps 1-2 million people died. At least another
    million came to the U.S.
  • People obviously began to realize the hazard of
    depending too heavily on one crop.

16
  • Today potatoes are grown everywhere in upland
    tropical and in temperate parts of the world.
  • Reproduced vegetatively. Burbank produced many
    new lines. Seeds often sterile.
  • Solanum tuberosum cultivars are usually
    tetraploids.
  • In the U.S. most of crop goes into potato chips
    and freeze dried instant mashed potatoes.
  • These processes solve much of shipping weight
    problem.

17
  • Tuber about 80 water, about 20 starch, 2
    protein.
  • Toxicity of potatoes. Lenape line of chipping
    potatoes. Greened tubers can produce
    teratogenicity. In some areas of Bolivia, people
    practice geophagy to absorb the toxic materials
    from primitive lines of cultivated potatoes.
  • Potatoes are often treated to prevent sprouting.
    Harvested potatoes are washed and stored cool.
    Sugar is converted to starch on storage.

18
  • Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, and Poland are major
    producers.
  • In the U.S., Florida and California (winter) and
    Maine, California, Idaho (summer) are major
    producing areas.
  • Newfoundland, Maritime Provinces, and Vancouver
    Island, B.C., in Canada.

19
Sweet potatoes (Ipomoea batatas, Convolvulaceae)
  • Sweet potatoes are native to northwestern South
    America.
  • They were taken very early to the South Pacific
    area and many considered them native there.
  • Some postulated that sweet potatoes were taken
    from South America to the South Pacific by
    pre-Columbian voyagers.

20
Sweet potatoes, Ipomoea batatas, Convolvulaceae
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  • Sweet potatoes have been found in South America
    as far back as 8000-10000 years. They were
    cultivated by 2000 B.C. Some feel that they go
    back in the South Pacific as far as 1200 A.D.
  • A hexaploid.
  • Wild forms are not known with certainty. Origin
    complex.

22
  • The sweet potato is a true root. They are usually
    reproduced vegetatively using portions of the
    aerial stem.
  • The roots contain about 2 protein. Lots of
    vitamin A.

23
  • In Japan, (especially) sweet potatoes are a major
    crop. They are used there to prepare starch, wine
    and alcohol. They are also widely fed to animals.
    China is easily the world's leading producer.
  • Widely eaten in the southern U.S. Not eaten
    particularly in Europe.

24
Cassava (Manihot esculenta)
  • Cassava (also known as manioc, mandioca, or yuca)
    is widely eaten. This plant is the major starchy
    food for more than 500 million people.
  • Cassava is native to central South America and
    has been cultivated for thousands of years.

25
Cassava or yuca, Manihot esculenta, Euphorbiaceae
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Peeling and washing cassava
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Grinding and pressing cassava
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Seiving the catevia and removal of nepe
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Cooking the tortas
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Tortas
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Drying tortas and tortas in market
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  • Griddles for cooking cassava go back at least
    2000 years.
  • However, since the crop developed in the lowland
    tropics where preservation is poor, it may go
    back much farther.
  • Cassava contributes over 37 of the total
    calories consumed in Africa and 11 in Latin
    America.
  • Little nutritional value other than starch. About
    30 starch. Little protein. Doesn't keep well
    when harvested.

33
  • Cassava is toxic if not processed properly.
  • The natives of South America had developed
    technology to remove the cyanide generating
    compounds.
  • Sweet and bitter cultivars.
  • Highly productive and little labor involved.
  • Will keep for several months if left in ground.
  • Reproduced vegetatively from stem cuttings.

34
  • Sweet types often boiled and fried.
  • Bitter types often made into "tortas" or
    "farinha".
  • Tapioca made from partially gelatinized cassava
    starch.

35
Yams or Ñame
  • Not to be confused with the sweet potato
    (Convolvulaceae).
  • Ignaime (French) or ñame (Spanish) ... but
    probably originally from an African language.
  • Yams are Dioscorea species and members of the
    Dioscoreaceae.
  • Different species cultivated in Africa (where
    they were especially important), Asia, and the
    Americas.
  • Probably tubers.

36
Dioscorea spp., true yams, Dioscoreaceae, female
flowers
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A yam, Dioscorea sp., Dioscoreaceae
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  • Reproduction asexual.
  • Many are poisonous and must be peeled and/or
    cooked to remove toxic principles.
  • Yams relatively high in protein for root crops.
  • In most places where yams were formerly
    cultivated, they have been replaced by sweet
    potatoes or cassava.

39
Taro and its relatives
  • These are plants of the Araceae. Taro is
    Colocasia esculenta. Members of this family
    domesticated as root crops in both the Old and
    New World. Colocasia is native to Asia.
  • A corm.
  • About 30 starch, 3 sugar. Must be boiled to be
    eaten.
  • A staple in the Polynesian area. In Hawaii, they
    use taro to make poi. Hawaiians used to eat 10-20
    lbs. per day.

40
Taro, Calocasia esculenta, Araceae, field in
Madagascar
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Taro, Calocasia esculenta, Araceae
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Jicama, Pachyrrhizus erosus, Fabaceae
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Minor Andean root crops
  • A large number of these were domesticated in the
    Andes. Few (other than the potato) were used
    outside of the area.
  • añu Tropaeolum tuberosum
  • arracacia Arracacia xanthorrhiza
  • oca Oxalis tuberosa
  • melloco Ullucus tuberosus, Basellaceae, second
    only to potatoes in upland Peru.
  • maca Lepidium meyenii, Brassicaceae or
    Cruciferae.
  • llacón Polymnia sonchifolia, Asteraceae or
    Compositae.

44
Añu, Tropaeolum tuberosum, Tropaeolaceae
Courtesy R. Norton
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Añu, Tropaeolum tuberosum, Tropaeolaceae
Courtesy Dr. Tim Johns
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Arracacia, Arracacia xanthorhiza, Apiaceae
Courtesy Nancy Hikes
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Oca and quinoa in a Bolivian garden
Courtesy Dr. Tim Johns
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Oca, Oxalis tuberosa, Oxalidaceae
Courtesy Dr. Tim Johns
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Melloco, Ullucus tuberosus, Basellaceae
Courtesy R. Norton
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Maca, Lepidium meyenii, Brassicaceae or
Cruciferae.
Courtesy Dr. Tim Johns
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Harvesting maca in Bolivia
Courtesy Dr. Tim Johns
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Llacón, Polymnia sonchifolia, Asteraceae or
Compositae
Courtesy Dr. Tim Johns
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