Human nutrition
Nearly
all the food we eat comes (directly and indirectly) from plants, such
as this American long grain rice
Virtually all foods come either directly from plants, or indirectly from
animals that eat plants.Plants are the fundamental base of nearly all
food chains because they use the energy from the sun and nutrients from
the soil and atmosphere, converting them into a form that can be
consumed and utilized by animals; this is what ecologists call the first
trophic level.Botanists also study how plants produce food we can eat
and how to increase yields and therefore their work is important in
mankind's ability to feed the world and provide food security for future
generations, for example, through plant breeding. Botanists also study
weeds, plants which are considered to be a nuisance in a particular
location. Weeds are a considerable problem in agriculture, and botany
provides some of the basic science used to understand how to minimize
'weed' impact in agriculture and native ecosystems..Ethnobotany is the
study of the relationships between plants and people, and when this kind
of study is turned to the investigation of plant-people relationships
in past times, it is referred to as archaeobotany or paleoethnobotany.
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