Broomcorn millet

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Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
דוחן פרוסו
Name (Latin)
Broomcorn millet
Name (Arabic)
דוחן פרוסו
Other forms of name
Bread millet
Broom millet
Common millet
Hog millet
Panicum miliaceum
Proso (Plant)
Proso millet
See Also From tracing topical name
Millets
Panicum
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata: Q165196
Library of congress: sh 96009055
Sources of Information
  • PREMARC
  • SPN
  • FAO plants and plant products
  • Dict. agr. term.
  • Hortus 3
  • CAB thes.
  • Web. 3
  • Biol. & agr.:
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Wikipedia description:

Panicum miliaceum is a grain crop with many common names, including proso millet, broomcorn millet, common millet, hog millet, Kashfi millet, red millet, and white millet. Archaeobotanical evidence suggests millet was first domesticated about 10,000 BP in Northern China. Major cultivated areas include Northern China, Himachal Pradesh of India, Nepal, Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, the Middle East, Turkey, Romania, and the Great Plains states of the United States. About 500,000 acres (200,000 hectares) are grown each year. The crop is notable both for its extremely short lifecycle, with some varieties producing grain only 60 days after planting, and its low water requirements, producing grain more efficiently per unit of moisture than any other grain species tested. The name "proso millet" comes from the pan-Slavic general and generic name for millet (Serbo-Croatian: proso/просо, Czech: proso, Polish: proso, Russian: просо). Proso millet is a relative of foxtail millet, pearl millet, maize, and sorghum within the grass subfamily Panicoideae. While all of these crops use C4 photosynthesis, the others all employ the NADP-ME as their primary carbon shuttle pathway, while the primary C4 carbon shuttle in proso millet is the NAD-ME pathway.

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