Underdeveloped Crops: Difference between revisions
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=Basics= | =Basics= | ||
*Plants / "Proto-Crops" that were never domesticated | *Plants / "Proto-Crops" that were never domesticated | ||
* | *This was often due to the time needed for [[Selective Breeding]] of these crops being longer than how long it took for another culture to introduce an existing crop | ||
**This has led to [[Monocultures]] as well as growing non-native plants, leading to issues like [[Drought Tolerance]] | **This has led to [[Monocultures]] as well as growing non-native plants, leading to issues like [[Drought Tolerance]] | ||
*Via [[Genetic Engineering]] what took decades or GENERATIONS, can be done in years | *Via [[Genetic Engineering]] what took decades or GENERATIONS, can be done in ''years'' | ||
*Corn/Maize is a great example of how far something can come | *Corn/Maize is a great example of how far something can come. It went from [[Teosinte]] to modern [[Sweetcorn]] , and this was done mostly via selective breeding! | ||
*If this level of change was applied to [[Cattails]] , [[Pawpaws]] , or [[ | *If this level of change was applied to [[Cattails]] , [[Pawpaws]] , or [[Dandelions]] for food use, there could be many new crops | ||
*Most [[Cruciferous vegetables]] came from one "ancestor plant". Thus developing even one of the MANY potential underdeveloped crops humanity could gain many new food ingredients, that also may grow better in some areas | *Most [[Cruciferous vegetables]] came from one "ancestor plant". Thus by developing even just ''one'' of the MANY potential underdeveloped crops, humanity could gain many new food ingredients, that also may grow better in some areas where other more "conventional" crops are challenging | ||
=Internal Links= | =Internal Links= | ||
*[[Coontie Palm]] ( [[Florida Arrowroot]] ) | |||
*[[Cattail]] | *[[Cattail]] | ||
*[[Pawpaw]] | *[[Pawpaw]] | ||
=External Links= | =External Links= | ||
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neglected_and_underutilized_crop The Wikipedia Page on Neglected and underutilized crops] (Wikipedia chose this name, it seems to have few (~300,000) results in google search, GRANTED the "underdeveloped" may be leading to use cases such as "Underdeveloped nations" and thus lots of irrelevant results inflating results? Either way this page's name is more concise and ties into the "developer" language. Any thoughts on this? (could discuss further in the discussion page, or [[Slack]] / [[Discord]] ) | *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neglected_and_underutilized_crop The Wikipedia Page on Neglected and underutilized crops] | ||
**(Wikipedia chose this name, it seems to have few (~300,000) results in google search, GRANTED the "underdeveloped" may be leading to use cases such as "Underdeveloped nations" and thus lots of irrelevant results inflating results? Either way this page's name is more concise and ties into the "developer" language. Any thoughts on this? (could discuss further in the discussion page, or [[Slack]] / [[Discord]] ) | |||
[[Category: Food and Agriculture]] [[Category: Underdeveloped Crops]] |
Latest revision as of 17:57, 10 August 2023
Basics
- Plants / "Proto-Crops" that were never domesticated
- This was often due to the time needed for Selective Breeding of these crops being longer than how long it took for another culture to introduce an existing crop
- This has led to Monocultures as well as growing non-native plants, leading to issues like Drought Tolerance
- Via Genetic Engineering what took decades or GENERATIONS, can be done in years
- Corn/Maize is a great example of how far something can come. It went from Teosinte to modern Sweetcorn , and this was done mostly via selective breeding!
- If this level of change was applied to Cattails , Pawpaws , or Dandelions for food use, there could be many new crops
- Most Cruciferous vegetables came from one "ancestor plant". Thus by developing even just one of the MANY potential underdeveloped crops, humanity could gain many new food ingredients, that also may grow better in some areas where other more "conventional" crops are challenging
Internal Links
External Links
- The Wikipedia Page on Neglected and underutilized crops
- (Wikipedia chose this name, it seems to have few (~300,000) results in google search, GRANTED the "underdeveloped" may be leading to use cases such as "Underdeveloped nations" and thus lots of irrelevant results inflating results? Either way this page's name is more concise and ties into the "developer" language. Any thoughts on this? (could discuss further in the discussion page, or Slack / Discord )