Tag Archives: biodiversity

Broccoli!

  1. Origin
  2. Modern Cultivation
  3. Impact
  4. Nutritional Profile
  5. Dietary Concerns
  6. How to Eat it
  7. Recipe: Roasted Broccoli

Origin

Broccoli is a member of the cole crops (also known as cruciferous vegetables), all of which are derived from a singular species known as Brassica oleracea L.. This includes kale, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, kohlrabi, and cabbage and each of these foods share a genome with the wild type, Brassica. As with so many things, it’s difficult to prove exact origin of species, especially when it involves human cultivation and migration; however, most studies indicate Europe, broadly, as the birthplace of these Brassica plants. Very little evidence indicates Asia as a potential origin and within Europe there is a slight divide between the UK and Greece, but there is stronger evidence for the rocky shores of England. There is a fascinating paper that uses linguistic terms for “broccoli” in various ancient cultures to help identify the origin that some of you might be interested in reading. In the end, broccoli is just one form, or cultivar, of a group of plants that has been selected for it’s specific geno-/phenotype that gives us what we, today, call broccoli.

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Regenerating Life and Love: The Animals (and Fungi)

At the risk of forging through the gate this week with another complaint about the human species, I want to lead with a personal frustration I have when I hear individuals reduce the importance of a species that is going, or has gone, extinct with a flippant toss of the hair, followed by a casual “who cares?” This is often embedded within a conversation intended to discredit environmental programs that favor a small endangered organism over that of human interest. Well, I’m pretty sure I speak on behalf of the organisms at risk of becoming extinct that they care. They probably care a great deal. Moreover, we should all care. Perhaps, if we just took the time to realize their worth….

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The Disposable Society and My Current Rage

I am taking a pause this week from my Regenerating Life and Love posts to rage. There are so many things happening in my country right now. Depending on your ideologies, they might be horrifying or exciting. I’ve tried multiple times to bring myself into a space of understanding and contemplation, but I am struggling. What I am witnessing is, for me, horrifying.

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Regenerating Life and Love: The Environment

Starting this week’s look into the environment and how it regenerates after trauma is a learning activity for me. I took some ecology and environmental studies coursework in my undergrad career, but as a biology major, my well of knowledge on the matter is fairly shallow and might hold no more than a few little row boats of information and wisdom. The first term I discovered in my research was: ecological succession (Witynski, n.d.). Primary ecological succession explains how life takes shape when a new island or other land mass is created, perhaps, by lava flows and results in a rocky terrain, void of any soil or plant life. Eventually lichens and other plants requiring little or no soil begin to appear, leading to grasses, then shrubs, then small trees until, finally, larger hardwood trees take over. After an extreme event that destroys an environment, a secondary succession takes place. This is similar, however, does not go all the way back to the barren rocky terrain phase. As the soil has been established it can pick back up with grasses, shrubs, and smaller trees.

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