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Rapeseed - Cultivation and uses |  | Rapeseed - Cultivation and uses: Encyclopedia II - Rapeseed - Cultivation and uses |  | Rapeseed is very widely cultivated throughout the world for the production of animal feed, vegetable oil for human consumption, and biodiesel; leading producers include the European Union, Canada, the United States, Australia, China and India. In India, it is grown on 13% of cropped land. According to the United States Department of Agriculture, rapeseed was the third leading source of vegetable oil in the world in 2000, after soybean and oil palm, and also the world's second leading source of protein meal, although only one-fifth of the pro ...
See also:Rapeseed, Rapeseed - Cultivation and uses, Rapeseed - Biodiesel, Rapeseed - Rapeseed and health, Rapeseed - Controversy, Rapeseed - Production, Rapeseed - Pests and diseases affecting rapeseed, Rapeseed - Insect pests, Rapeseed - Diseases, Rapeseed - Reference |  | | Rapeseed, Rapeseed - Biodiesel, Rapeseed - Controversy, Rapeseed - Cultivation and uses, Rapeseed - Diseases, Rapeseed - Insect pests, Rapeseed - Pests and diseases affecting rapeseed, Rapeseed - Production, Rapeseed - Rapeseed and health, Rapeseed - Reference, canola, biosafety, transgenic plants, Triangle of U |  | |
|  |  | Rapeseed: Encyclopedia II - Rapeseed - Cultivation and uses
Rapeseed - Cultivation and uses
Rapeseed is very widely cultivated throughout the world for the production of animal feed, vegetable oil for human consumption, and biodiesel; leading producers include the European Union, Canada, the United States, Australia, China and India. In India, it is grown on 13% of cropped land. According to the United States Department of Agriculture, rapeseed was the third leading source of vegetable oil in the world in 2000, after soybean and oil palm, and also the world's second leading source of protein meal, although only one-fifth of the production of the leading soybean meal. World production is growing rapidly, with FAO reporting that 36 million tonnes of rapeseed was produced in the 2003-4 season, and 46 million tonnes in 2004-5. In Europe, rapeseed is primarily cultivated for animal feed (due to its very high lipid and medium protein content), and is a leading option for Europeans to avoid importation of GMO products.
Natural rapeseed oil contains erucic acid, which is mildly toxic to humans in large doses but is used as a food additive in smaller doses. Canola is one of many selected cultivars of rapeseed bred to have a low erucic acid content. Canola was developed in Canada and its name is a contraction of "Canadian oil, low acid". The name was also chosen partly for marketing reasons, so successfully that the name is sometimes mis-applied to other cultivars of rapeseed.
The rapeseed is the valuable, harvested component of the crop. The crop is also grown as a winter-cover crop. It provides good coverage of the soil in winter, and limits nitrogen run-off. The plant is ploughed back in the soil or used as bedding.
Processing of rapeseed for oil production provides rapeseed animal meal as a by-product. The by-product is a high-protein animal feed, competitive with soya. The feed is mostly employed for cattle feeding, but also for pigs and chickens (though less valuable for these). The meal has a very low content of the glucosinolates responsible for metabolism disruption in cattle and pigs.
Rapeseed is made into cakes that are used for plant and specifically bonsai fertilization.
Rapeseed leaves and stems are also edible, similar to those of the related bok choy or kale. Some varieties of rapeseed (called 油菜, yóu cài, lit. "oil vegetable" in Chinese; yu choy in Cantonese) are sold as greens, primarily in Asian groceries.
Rapeseed is a heavy nectar producer, and honeybees produce a light colored, but peppery honey from it. It must be extracted immediately after processing is finished, as it will quickly granulate in the honeycomb and will be impossible to extract. The honey is usually blended with milder honeys, if used for table use, or sold as bakery grade. Rapeseed growers contract with beekeepers for the pollination of the crop.
Other related archivesAustralia, Blackleg, Brassica napobrassica, Brassicaceae, Canada, Canadian Supreme Court, Canola, China, Chinese, Clubroot, European Union, FAO, Flea beetles, GMO, Grasshoppers, India, Lygus bugs, Monsanto Company, Old English, Roundup, Snails, Triangle of U, United States, United States Department of Agriculture, allergies, animal, animal feed, asthma, bakery, beekeepers, biodiesel, biodiversity, biosafety, bok choy, canola, cattle, chickens, contract, cover crop, cultivar, cultivars, diesel, erucic acid, feed, flowering, gene, genetically engineered, hay fever, herbicide, honey, honeybees, honeycomb, insects, kale, leaves, lipid, nectar, nitrogen, oil palm, pigs, pollen, protein, protist, slugs, soil, soya, soybean, transgenic plants, vegetable oil, weeds, wildflowers, wildlife, winter
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Cultivation and uses", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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