Plants

Monday, 23 February 2026
21 facts about olives
21 facts about olives
"Where the olive refuses to grow, there the Mediterranean world ends"
It is not known exactly when and where the first olive tree, characteristic of the Mediterranean region, grew. Paleobotanists claim that wild olives g ...

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Grapes
In 2005, work began on sequencing the grapevine genome.
As a result of the research, it turned out that vines contain more than twice as many genes involved ...
Chia seeds
Chia is an annual plant that grows up to 1 meter (3,2 feet) tall.
Its flowers are purple or white, gathered in whorls at the tips of the stems. The fruits (splits) co ...
Baobab tree
During the dry season, baobabs shed their leaves just as deciduous trees do in winter across the northern hemisphere.
Corn
After the arrival of Europeans in Mesoamerica in 1492, Spanish settlers consumed corn, although they much preferred wheat bread.
It was also related to the fact that wheat flour could not be substituted for corn flour when making ...
Asparagus
Asparagus has two subspecies.
One of them, Asparagus prostranus, grows especially abundantly on the coast of Cornwall, where one of the islands of the Lizard Peninsula is named Asparagus Island.
Baobab tree
Baobab species growing in Madagascar have more compact crowns and long, cylindrycal trunks compared to those growing in continental Africa.
Beetroot
They are important in prevention as well as in the fight against cancer.
They owe their anti-cancer effect to their betanin content, which is an antioxidant that fights free radicals.
Olives
Black olives are harvested in December.
Vanilla
Orchids are a cosmopolitan family found on all continents except Antarctica.
The greatest diversity of orchid species is found in the intertropical zone, especially in the Ameri ...
Kale
It is a resistant plant to diseases and pests that attack other plants in the cabbage family.