Eudicotyledones 
Rosidae 
Ordo : Brassicales 
Familia : Brassicaceae 
Genus : Brassica 
Species : Brassica oleracea 
  Grex Botrytis 

Brassica oleracea Grex Botrytis, in variis linguis nomine "caulis flores" simile vulgo appellata,[1] est annua familiae Brassicacearum planta florens, cuius caput holus ab hominibus editur. Seminibus seritur.[2] Caput est inflorescentia in plerumque albo meristemate consistens, capitorum brassicarum gregis Italici similis, quorum autem gemmae florum sunt pars edulis.

Plantae Brassicae oleraceae Gregis Botrytidis in viridario mercatorio in Nova Caesarea mense Aprili crescunt.

Grex Botrytis inter greges speciei Brassicae oleraceae in taxinomia Linnaeana digeritur. Aliae notissimae eiusdem speciei greges sunt Acephala, Alboglabra. Capitata, Gemmifera, Gongylodes, Italica, et Sabauda, qui una vulgo appellantur vegetabilia crucifera.[3]

Plantae Brassicae oleraceae Gregis Botrytidis praecipue plantarum Brassicae oleraceae Gregis Italicae similes sunt, quae sunt alter sed arte conexus cultivarietatum eiusdem speciei generis Brassicae grex. Anno 2017, civitates Sina et India 73 centesimas frugum mundi horum gregum binorum una produxerunt.[4]

Inter insecta quae plantas huius gregis laedunt sunt Aphidoidea et Heterocera.

Plinius hoc holus fortasse in eius libris de historia naturali commemoravit, dicens "Ex omnibus brassicae generibus suavissima est cyma."[5]

Brassica oleracea Grex Botrytis in Calendario republicano Francico septimo diei mensis Frimarii tribuebatur.[6]

Pinacotheca

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Capita variorum colorum.

  1. Ex cauli fiore, vocabulo Italiano derivato. Caulis et flos, vocabula nostrae linguae, fontes huius vocabuli esse videntur.
  2. Vincent A. Fritz; Carl J. Rosen; Michelle A. Grabowski; William D. Hutchison; Roger L. Becker; Cindy Tong; Jerry A. Wright; Terry T. Nennich (2017). "Growing broccoli, cabbage and cauliflower in Minnesota". University of Minnesota Extension, Garden: Growing Vegetables .
  3. "Cabbage, Broccoli, Cauliflower, and Other Brassica Crops". Center for Agriculture, Food and the Environment, College of Natural Sciences, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA. 14 Ianuarii 2013 .
  4. "Broccoli (and cauliflower) production in 2018, Crops/Regions/World list/Production Quantity (pick lists)," Corporate Statistical Database (FAOSTAT), UN Food and Agriculture Organization, 2019. Editio interretialis.
  5. Plinius (1841). Weise, C. H.. ed. Historiae Naturalis Libri XX. p. 249 .
  6. Philippe Fr. Na. Fabre d'Églantine, Rapport fait à la Convention nationale dans la séance du 3 du second mois de la seconde année de la République Française, p. 21.

Bibliographia

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Aloo gobi, ferculum Indicum, cum Brassica oleracea Grex Botrytis et patatis paratum.
 
Alu-fulcopi rosa, ferculum Indicum, cum Brassica oleracea Grex Botrytis et patatis paratum.
Fontes antiquiores
Eruditio
  • Crozier, Arthur Alger. 1891. The Cauliflower. Ann Arbor, Michigan: Register Publishing Company. Editio interretialis.
  • Kirschner, Sabine, et Helmut Göppel. 2014. Handbuch der Pflanzenöle. Param. ISBN 978-3-88755-714-0.
  • Sharma, S. R., P. K. Singh, V. Chable, et S. K. Tripathi. 2004. "A review of hybrid cauliflower development." Journal of New Seeds 6 (2–3): 151. doi:10.1300/J153v06n02_08. s2cid=85136416.
  • Smith, Lee B., et Graham J. King. 2000. "The distribution of BoCAL-a alleles in Brassica oleracea is consistent with a genetic model for curd development and domestication of the cauliflower." Molecular Breeding 6 (6): 603–613. doi:10.1023/A:1011370525688.
  • Swarup, V., et S. S. Chatterjee. 1972. "Origin and genetic improvement of Indian cauliflower." Economic Botany 26 (4): 381–93. doi:10.1007/BF02860710. S2CID 37487958.
  • Toussaint-Samat, Maguelonne. 2009. A History of Food. Ed. secunda. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 1-4443-0514-X.
  • Udelgard Körber-Grohne: Nutzpflanzen in Deutschland – Von der Vorgeschichte bis heute. Nikol, Hamburg 1995, ISBN 3-933203-40-6.
  • Wheaton, Barbara Ketcham. 1996. Savoring the Past: the French kitchen and table from 1300 to 1789. Touchstone. ISBN 0-684-81857-4.
  • Wolf, Jan M. Van Der, et Patrici S. Van Der Zouwen. 2010. "Colonization of Cauliflower Blossom (Brassica oleracea) by Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris, via Flies (Calliphora vomitoria) Can Result in Seed Infestation." Journal of Phytopathology 158 (11–12): 726–32. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0434.2010.01690.x. ISSN 1439-0434.

Nexus externi

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  Vicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Brassicam oleraceam Gregem Botrytem spectant (Cauliflower, Brassica oleracea var. botrytis).
  Situs scientifici: Tropicos • GRIN • ITIS • NCBI • Biodiversity • Plant Name Index • Flora of China • INPN France • Flora of North America • USDA Plants Database