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Brassica oleracea

(Redirected from Wild Cabbage)
Brassica oleracea

Cultivated Cabbage plants
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Plantae
Division:Magnoliophyta
Class:Magnoliopsida
Order:Brassicales
Family:Brassicaceae
Genus:Brassica
Species:B. oleracea
Binomial name
Brassica oleracea
L.
See also cabbage

Brassica oleracea or Wild Cabbage, is a species of Brassica native to coastal southern and western Europe, where its resistance to salt and lime but intolerance of competition from other plants typically restricts is natural occurrence to limestone sea cliffs.

It is a tall biennial plant, forming a stout rosette of large leaves in the first year, the leaves being fleshier and thicker than those of other Brassica species, adaptations to store water and nutrients in a difficult growing environment. In its second year, the stored nutrients are used to produce a flower spike 1–2 m tall bearing numerous yellow flowers.

According to the Triangle of U, B. oleracea is very closely related to many other species in the Brassica genus.

Cultivation and uses

Brassica oleracea is one of the most important human food crop plants, and has been cultivated for several thousand years, used because of its large food reserves, rich in essential nutrients including vitamin C, stored over the winter in its leaves.

A radically varying range of cultivars, hardly recognizable as being members of a single species, have been developed; they are grouped by developmental form into seven major Cultivar Groups, of which the Acephala Group remains most like the natural Wild Cabbage in appearance:

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Brassica oleracea







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