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Cassava

Cassava

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Minimum Order

Place of Origin:

Nigeria

Price for Minimum Order:

-

Minimum Order Quantity:

-

Packaging Detail:

50 kg Polypropylene bags and delivered in trucks of 30 metric tonnes

Delivery Time:

-

Supplying Ability:

-

Payment Type:

T/T, L/C

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Free Member

Contact Person Benjamin

Plot No, 13 Oladimeo Alao Street Lekk Phase, Lagos, Lagos

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Description

About Cassava:
Brief:
Cassava is the third-largest source of carbohydrates for meals in the world. Nigeria is the world’s largest producer of Cassava.
The cassava root is long and tapered, with a firm homogeneous flesh encased in a detachable rind, about 1mm thick, rough and brown on the outside. Commercial varieties can be 5 to *0 cm in diameter at the top, and around *5 cm to *0 cm long. A woody cordon runs along the root's axis. The flesh can be chalk-white or yellowish. Cassava roots are very rich in starch, and contain significant amounts of calcium (*0 mg/**0g), phosphorus (*0 mg/**0g) and vitamin C (*5 mg/**0g). However, they are poor in protein and other nutrients. In contrast, cassava leaves are a good source of protein, and are rich in the amino acid lysine, though deficient in methionine and possibly tryptophan.
Cassava (Manihot esculenta), also called yuca or manioc, a woody shrub of the Euphorbiaceae (spurge family) native to South America, is extensively cultivated as an annual crop in tropical and subtropical regions for its edible starchy tuberous root, a major source of carbohydrates. Nigeria is the world's largest producer of cassava
.
Note: mind 2 different plants that just change 1 letter: Yucca and Yuca.
Cassava is the third-largest source of carbohydrates for meals in the world.[1][2] It is classified as sweet or bitter, depending on the level of toxic cyanogenic glucosides. (However, bitter taste is not always a reliable measure.[3]) Improper preparation of cassava can leave enough residual cyanide to cause acute cyanide intoxication and goiters, and has been linked to ataxia or partial paralysis.[4] Nevertheless, farmers often prefer the bitter varieties because they deter pests, animals, and thieves.[5] In some locations the more toxic varieties serve as a fall-back resource (a "food security crop") in times of famine.[6]
Cassava is sometimes spelled cassaba or cassada.[7]

 In English-language publications, the plant may be occasionally called by local names, such as mandioca, aipim, or macaxeira (Brazil), yuca (Cuba, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Panama,Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia),
mandi´o (Paraguay), akpu, ege , ugburu, ntororo or ukuduk (Nigeria),
 bankye (Ghana),bananku (Mali and other parts of West Africa),
mogo or mihogo (Swahili-speaking Africa), pondu in (Lingala-speaking Africa), maravaLLi kilangu : kappa (Malayalam), maniokka (Sri Lanka), singkong (Indonesia), ubikayu (Malaysia), kamoteng kahoy or balanghoy (Philippines),
mushu (China), man sampalang (Thailand), karapendalam (Telegu), c? s?n or khoai mì (Vietnam), man thon (???????) (Laos), and manioke, tapioka or manioka (Polynesia). History:
Wild populations of M. esculenta subspecies flabellifolia, shown to be the progenitor of domesticated cassava, are centered in west-central Brazil, where it was likely first domesticated no more than *0,**0 years BP.[*0] By 6,**0 BC, manioc pollen appears in the Gulf of Mexico lowlands, at the San Andrés archaeological site.[*1]The oldest direct evidence of cassava cultivation comes from a 1,**0 year old Maya site, Joya de Cerén, in El Salvador.[*2] although the species Manihot esculenta likely originated further south in Brazil
 and Paraguay.

With its high food potential, it had become a staple food of the native populations of northern South America, southern Mesoamerica, and the Caribbean by the time of the Spanish conquest, and its cultivation was continued by the colonial Portuguese and Spanish. Forms of the modern domesticated species can be found growing in the wild in the south of Brazil. While there are several wild Manihot species, all varieties of M. esculenta are cultigens.
Cassava was a staple food for pre-Columbian peoples in the Americas, and is often portrayed in indigenous art. The Moche people often depicted yuca in their ceramics.[*3]

Since being introduced by Portuguese traders from Brazil in the *6th century, maize and cassava have replaced traditional African crops as the continent’s most important staple food crops.[*4] Cassava is sometimes described as the ‘bread of the tropics

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