Growing Food: A Guide to Food Production

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an international agreement about the general characteristics of plants, and how they can
be described. Comprehensive details on plant taxonomy are available online at the
USDA s website GRIN—the Germplasm Resources Information Network.
Recent research involving gene transfer (modification) and identification has lead to
a greater understanding of the similarities and differences between species, so the never
ending renaming of species and sub-species will inevitably continue.


Division
All flowering plants belong to one of two Divisions:



  • Angiosperms—plants that have their ovules and seeds enclosed within the pistil,
    and which develop into a seed-bearing fruit. Almost all agricultural and
    horticultural plants, including all of those described in this document, are
    Angiosperms.

  • Gymnosperms—plants which have “naked seeds”. Their seeds develop on the
    surface or at the tip of an appendage, and are not enclosed in it. Examples: pine
    trees, juniper and the ferns.
    Class
    Plants are also classified into one of the two plant Classes:


  • see above. The veins on the leaves are normally parallel, or nearly so. Virtually all




grasses—are monocotyledons.


  • Dicotyledons—often called “dicots”, each seed contains two cotyledons ie virtually
    all of the other food crops and non-food species. The veins on the leaves normally
    have a type of a network pattern.


Order
An Order consists of several related families. For example the Families Papaveraceae


Family
Similar genera are grouped into families. Any group of plants that can normally cross-
pollinate and reproduce with each other are classified into the same family. This divides
them from plants of other families with which they do not normally reproduce.
Most of the important field crops are in two families, the Leguminoseae (legumes)


food producers are: Solanaceae (eg tomatoes, Irish potato, eggplant), Crucifereae (eg
cabbage, broccoli and other brassicas), and Chenopodiaceae (eg sugar beet and
spinach).


Genus
A genus consists of a number of similar species. The plural form of Genus is “Genera”;
similar Genera are grouped into Families. For example, some of the important Genera of


Monocotyledons—often called “monocots”, their seed has only one cotyledon-

of the true cereal crops—rice, wheat, barley, maize etc.—and sugarcane and

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the Order Rhoedales.


(Poppies), Fumariaceae, Cruciferae (Brassicas) and Resedaceae are all members of


and the Poaceae (Gramineae) (grasses and cereals). Other plant families of interest to


GROWING FOOD – THE FOOD PRODUCTION HANDBOOK


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