Iva annua
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Iva annua | ||||||||||||||
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Iva annua L. |
Iva annua (sumpweed or marshelder) is an herbaceous annual plant native to much of North America. Iva annua var. macrocarpa was formerly cultivated by Native Americans in the Eastern United States and specifically near modern day Illinois for its edible seed. As the author Jared Diamond notes, the edible parts contain 32 percent protein and 45 percent oil.
However, like its relative ragweed, Diamond notes that sumpweed possesses many objectionable qualities which include being a severe allergen, possessing "a strong odor objectionable to some people and that handling it can cause skin irritation." For these reasons Diamond believes that it was abandoned once more pleasant alternatives (like corn) were available, and by the time Europeans arrived in the Americas had long disappeared as a crop.[1]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Jared Diamond (2003). Guns, Germs and Steel. New York: Norton, 151.
[edit] External links
- Iva annua L.. MissouriPlants.com. Includes photographs.