Dictionary Definition
corn
Noun
1 tall annual cereal grass bearing kernels on
large ears: widely cultivated in America in many varieties; the
principal cereal in Mexico and Central and South America since
pre-Columbian times [syn: maize, Indian corn,
Zea
mays]
2 the dried grains or kernels or corn used as
animal feed or ground for meal
3 ears of corn grown for human food [syn:
edible
corn]
4 a hard thickening of the skin (especially on
the top or sides of the toes) caused by the pressure of ill-fitting
shoes [syn: clavus]
5 annual or biennial grass having erect flower
spikes and light brown grains [syn: wheat]
6 whiskey distilled from a mash of not less than
80 percent corn [syn: corn
whiskey, corn
whisky]
7 something sentimental or trite; "that movie was
pure corn"
Verb
1 feed (cattle) with corn
2 preserve with salt; "corned beef"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology 1
corn <- <- <- , neuter participle of . Cognate with Dutch koren, German Korn, Swedish korn; see also Russian зерно. Compare grain.Noun
- A grain or seed.
- The grain obtained from a plant, especially of cereal crops.
- A cereal plant grown for its grain (locally denoting the leading crop of that district, i.e. oats in parts of Scotland and Ireland, wheat, barley etc. in England and Wales, maize in the Americas).
- Maize.
- In the context of "US|Canada": Sweetcorn (Zea mays var. rugosa).
Derived terms
Translations
maize See maize
- Arabic: (ðora)
- Bosnian: kukuruz
- Catalan: blat de moro , dacsa , moresc , panís , panís de l'Índia
- Croatian: kukuruz
- Dutch: maïs , Turkse tarwe
- Estonian: mais
- Finnish: maissi
- French: maïs
- Galician: millo
- German: Mais
- Austrian: Kukuruz
- Hungarian: kukorica
- Isthmus Zapotec: xubaʼ
- Italian: granturco , granoturco , mais
- Maltese: qamħ
- Polish: kukurydza
- Russian: кукуруза (kukurúza)
- Serbian:
- Spanish: maíz
- Swedish: majs
- Telugu: మొక్కజొన్న (mokkajonna)
the fruits of a cereal crop
Verb
- In the context of "US|Canada": To granulate - form a substance into grains.
- In the context of "US|Canada": To preserve using coarse salt, e.g. Corned beef.
- In the context of "US|Canada": To provide with corn (typically maize) for feed. e.g. Corn the horses.
Etymology 2
From corn "horn" (modern: corne)Noun
- A callus on the foot.
Translations
callus
- German: Hühnerauge
- Italian: callo , durone
- Maltese: kallu
- Russian: мозоль (mozól’)
Etymology 3
Noun
- In the context of "US|Canada": Something (e.g. acting, humour, music, or writing) which is deemed old-fashioned or intended to induce emotion (Adjective: corny).
References
Irish
Pronunciation
- lang=ga|[koːɾˠn̪ˠ]
Noun
- horn (as a musical instrument)
Declension
Mutation
Old English
Etymology
, from .Germanic cognates: Old Frisian korn, Old Saxon korn (Dutch koren), Old High German korn (German Korn), Old Norse
korn (Swedish korn), Gothic
𐌺𐌰𐌿𐍂𐌽.
Indo-European cognates: Latin grānum, Old Church Slavonic
зрьно
(Russian зерно),
Lithuanian žìrnis, Old
Irish grán (Welsh
grawn).
Pronunciation
/koɹn/
Noun
corn nRomanian
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
cornusNoun
- European Cornel, scientific name Cornus mas
- rafter italbrac of a house
Declension
Etymology 2
From cornuNoun
Declension
Extensive Definition
distinguish Maze Maize () (Zea
mays L. ssp.
mays), known as corn in some countries, is a cereal grain domesticated in
Mesoamerica and
subsequently spread throughout the American continents. After
European contact with the Americas in the late 15th and early
16th century, maize spread to the rest of the world.
Maize is the most widely grown crop in the
Americas (270 million tonnes annually in the United
States alone). Hybrid
maize, due to its high grain yield as a result of heterosis ("hybrid vigour"),
is preferred by farmers over conventional varieties. While some
maize varieties grow up to 7 metres (23 ft) tall in certain
locations, most commercially grown maize has been bred for a height
of 2.5 metres (8 ft). Sweet corn is
usually shorter than field-corn varieties.
Naming conventions
The term maize derives from the Spanish form
(maíz) of the indigenous Taino term for the
plant, and is the form most commonly heard in the United
Kingdom. In the United
States, Canada and Australia, the
usual term is corn, which originally referred to any grain (and
still does in Britain), but which now refers exclusively to maize,
having been shortened from the form "Indian corn" (which currently,
at least in the U.S., is often used to refer specifically to
multi-colored "field corn" cultivars).
Physiology
Maize stems superficially resemble bamboo canes and the internodes
can reach 20–30 centimetres (8–12
in). Maize has a very
distinct growth form; the lower leaves being like broad flags,
50–100 centimetres long and
5–10 centimetres wide (2–4 ft
by 2–4 in); the stems are erect, conventionally
2–3 metres (7–10 ft) in
height, with many nodes, casting
off flag-leaves at every node. Under these leaves and close to the
stem grow the ears. They grow about 3 centimetres a
day.
The ears are female inflorescences, tightly
covered over by several layers of leaves, and so closed-in by them
to the stem that they do not show themselves easily until the
emergence of the pale yellow silks from the leaf whorl at the end
of the ear. The silks are elongated stigmas that look
like tufts of hair, at first green, and later red or yellow.
Plantings for silage are
even denser, and achieve an even lower percentage of ears and more
plant matter. Certain varieties of maize have been bred to produce
many additional developed ears, and these are the source of the
"baby corn" that is used as a vegetable in Asian
cuisine.
Maize is a facultative long-night
plant and flowers in a certain number of growing
degree days > 50 °F (10 °C) in the
environment to which it is adapted. The magnitude of the influence
that long nights have on the number of days that must pass before
maize flowers is
genetically prescribed and regulated by the phytochrome system. Photoperiodicity
can be eccentric in tropical cultivars, where in the long
days at higher latitudes the plants will grow so tall that they
will not have enough time to produce seed before they are killed by
frost. These characteristics, however, may prove useful in using
tropical maize for biofuels.
The apex of the stem ends in the tassel, an
inflorescence of
male flowers. Each silk may become pollinated to produce one kernel
of corn. Young ears can be consumed raw, with the cob and silk, but as the plant
matures (usually during the summer months) the cob becomes tougher
and the silk dries to inedibility. By the end of the growing
season, the kernels dry out and become difficult to chew without
cooking them tender first in boiling water. Modern farming
techniques in developed countries usually rely on dense planting,
which produces on average only about 0.9 ears per stalk because it
stresses the plants.
The kernel of corn has a pericarp of the fruit fused
with the seed coat, typical of the grasses. It is
close to a multiple
fruit in structure, except that the individual fruits (the
kernels) never fuse into a single mass. The grains are about the
size of peas, and adhere in
regular rows round a white pithy substance, which forms the ear. An
ear contains from 200 to 400 kernels, and is from
10–25 centimetres (4–10 inches) in
length. They are of various colors: blackish, bluish-gray, red,
white and yellow. When ground into flour, maize yields more flour,
with much less bran, than
wheat does. However, it lacks the protein gluten of wheat and therefore
makes baked goods with poor rising capability.
A genetic
variation that accumulates more sugar and less starch in the ear is consumed as
a vegetable and is
called sweet
corn.
Immature maize shoots accumulate a powerful
antibiotic substance, DIMBOA
(2,4-dihydroxy-7-methoxy-1,4-benzoxazin-3-one). DIMBOA is a member
of a group of hydroxamic
acids (also known as benzoxazinoids) that serve as a natural
defense against a wide range of pests including insects, pathogenic fungi and bacteria. DIMBOA is also found
in related grasses, particularly wheat. A maize mutant (bx) lacking
DIMBOA is highly susceptible to be attacked by aphids and fungi. DIMBOA is also responsible
for the relative resistance of immature maize to the European corn
borer (family Crambidae). As
maize matures, DIMBOA levels and resistance to the corn borer
decline.
Genetics
Many forms of maize are used for food, sometimes
classified as various subspecies:
- Flour corn — Zea mays var. amylacea
- Popcorn — Zea mays var. everta
- Dent corn — Zea mays var. indentata
- Flint corn — Zea mays var. indurata
- Sweet corn — Zea mays var. saccharata and Zea mays var. rugosa
- Waxy corn — Zea mays var. ceratina
- Amylomaize — Zea mays
- Pod corn — Zea mays var. tunicata Larrañaga ex A. St. Hil.
- Striped maize - Zea mays var. japonica
Maize has 10 chromosomes (n=10). The combined
length of the chromosomes is 1500 cM. Some of the
maize chromosomes have what are known as "chromosomal knobs":
highly repetitive heterochromatic domains
that stain darkly. Individual knobs are polymorphic
among strains of both maize and teosinte. Barbara
McClintock used these knob markers to prove her transposon theory of "jumping
genes", for which she won the 1983
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Maize is still an
important model
organism for genetics and developmental
biology today.
There is a stock center of maize mutants, The
Maize Genetics Cooperation — Stock Center, funded by the USDA
Agricultural Research Service and located in the Department of
Crop Sciences at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The total
collection has nearly 80,000 samples. The bulk of the collection
consists of several hundred named genes, plus additional gene
combinations and other heritable variants. There are about 1000
chromosomal aberrations (e.g., translocations and inversions) and
stocks with abnormal chromosome numbers (e.g., tetraploids). Genetic data
describing the maize mutant stocks as well as myriad other data
about maize genetics can be accessed at MaizeGDB, the Maize
Genetics and Genomics Database.
In 2005, the U.S.
National Science Foundation (NSF), Department of Agriculture
(USDA)
and the
Department of Energy (DOE) formed a consortium to sequence the
maize genome. The
resulting DNA sequence data will be deposited immediately into
GenBank, a
public repository for genome-sequence data. Sequencing the corn
genome has been considered difficult because of its large size and
complex genetic arrangements. The genome has 50,000–60,000 genes
scattered among the 2.5 billion bases – molecules that form DNA –
that make up its 10 chromosomes. (By comparison, the human genome
contains about 2.9 billion bases and 26,000 genes.)
On February 26,
2008,
researchers announced that the genome had been completed.
Origin
There are several theories about the specific origin of maize in Mesoamerica:- It is a direct domestication of a Mexican annual teosinte, Zea mays ssp. parviglumis, native to the Balsas River valley of southern Mexico, with up to 12% of its genetic material obtained from Zea mays ssp. mexicana through introgression.
- It derives from hybridization between a small domesticated maize (a slightly changed form of a wild maize) and a teosinte of section Luxuriantes, either Z. luxurians or Z. diploperennis.
- It underwent two or more domestications either of a wild maize or of a teosinte.
- It evolved from a hybridization of Z. diploperennis by Tripsacum dactyloides. (The term "teosinte" describes all species and subspecies in the genus Zea, excluding Zea mays ssp. mays.) In the late 1930s, Paul Mangelsdorf suggested that domesticated maize was the result of a hybridization event between an unknown wild maize and a species of Tripsacum, a related genus. However, the proposed role of tripsacum (gama grass) in the origins of maize has been refuted by modern genetic testing, negating Mangelsdorf’s model and the fourth listed above.
The first model was proposed by Nobel Prize
winner George
Beadle in 1939. Though it has experimental support, it has not
explained a number of problems, among them:
- how the immense diversity of the species of sect. Zea originated,
- how the tiny archaeological specimens of 3500–2700 BCE (uncorrected) could have been selected from a teosinte, and
- how domestication could have proceeded without leaving remains of teosinte or maize with teosintoid traits until ca. 1100 BCE.
The domestication of maize is of particular
interest to researchers—archaeologists, geneticists, ethnobotanists, geographers,
etc. The process is thought by some to have started 7,500 to 12,000
years ago (corrected for solar variations). Recent genetic evidence
suggests that maize domestication occurred 9,000 years ago in
central Mexico, perhaps in the highlands between Oaxaca and Jalisco. The wild
teosinte most similar to modern maize grows in the area of the
Balsas
River. Archaeological remains of early maize ears, found at
Guila
Naquitz Cave in the Oaxaca
Valley, date back roughly 6,250 years (corrected; 3450 BCE,
uncorrected); the oldest ears from caves near Tehuacan, Puebla,
date ca. 2750 BCE. Little change occurred in ear form until ca.
1100 BCE when great changes appeared in ears from Mexican caves:
maize diversity rapidly increased and archaeological teosinte was
first deposited.
Perhaps as early as 1500 BCE, maize began to
spread widely and rapidly. As it was introduced to new cultures,
new uses were developed and new varieties selected to better serve
in those preparations. Maize was the staple food, or a major
staple, of most the pre-Columbian
North
American, Mesoamerican,
South
American, and Caribbean
cultures. The Mesoamerican civilization was strengthened upon the
field crop of maize; through harvesting it, its religious and
spiritual importance and how it impacted their diet. Maize formed
the Mesoamerican people’s identity. During the 1st
millennium CE (AD), maize cultivation spread from Mexico into the
Southwest
and a millennium later into Northeast
and southeastern Canada, transforming
the landscape as Native Americans cleared large forest and
grassland areas for the new crop.
It is unknown what precipitated its
domestication, because the edible portion of the wild variety is
too small and hard to obtain to be eaten directly, as each kernel
is enclosed in a very hard bi-valve shell. However, George Beadle
demonstrated that the kernels of teosinte are readily "popped" for
human consumption, like modern popcorn. Some have argued that it
would have taken too many generations of selective
breeding in order to produce large compressed ears for
efficient cultivation. However, studies of the hybrids readily made
by intercrossing teosinte and modern maize suggest that this
objection is not well-founded.
In 2005, research by the
USDA
Forest Service indicated that the rise in maize cultivation 500
to 1,000 years ago in what is now the southeastern United States
contributed to the decline of freshwater mussels, which are very sensitive
to environmental changes.
Production quantities and methods
Maize is widely cultivated throughout the world, and a greater weight of maize is produced each year than any other grain. While the United States produces almost half of the world's harvest, other top producing countries are as widespread as China, Brazil, France, Indonesia, India and South Africa. Worldwide production was over 600 million metric tons in 2003 — just slightly more than rice or wheat. In 2004, close to 33 million hectares of maize were planted worldwide, with a production value of more than $23 billion.Because it is cold-intolerant, in the temperate
zones maize must be planted in the spring. Its root system is
generally shallow, so the plant is dependent on soil moisture. As a
C4 plant (a plant that uses C4
carbon fixation), maize is a considerably more water-efficient
crop than C3 plants (plants that use C3
carbon fixation) like the small grains, alfalfa and soybeans. Maize is most
sensitive to drought at the time of silk emergence, when the
flowers are ready for pollination. In the United
States, a good harvest was traditionally predicted if the corn
was "knee-high by the
Fourth of July", although modern hybrids
generally exceed this growth rate. Maize used for silage is harvested while the
plant is green and the fruit immature. Sweet corn is harvested in
the "milk stage", after pollination but before starch has formed,
between late summer and early to mid-autumn. Field corn is left in
the field very late in the autumn in order to thoroughly dry the
grain, and may, in fact, sometimes not be harvested until winter or
even early spring. The importance of sufficient soil moisture is
shown in many parts of Africa, where
periodic drought
regularly causes famine
by causing maize crop failure.
Maize was planted by the Native
Americans in hills, in a complex system known to some as the
Three Sisters: beans
used the corn plant for support, and squashes
provided ground cover to stop weeds. This method was replaced by
single species hill planting where each hill 60–120 cm (2–4 ft)
apart was planted with 3 or 4 seeds, a method still used by home
gardeners. A later technique was checked corn where hills were
placed 40 inches apart in each direction, allowing cultivators to
run through the field in two directions. In more arid lands this
was altered and seeds were planted in the bottom of 10–12 cm (4–5
in) deep furrows to collect water. Modern technique plants maize in
rows which allows for cultivation while the plant is young,
although the hill technique is still used in the cornfields of some
Native American reservations.
In North America, fields are often planted in a
two-crop
rotation with a nitrogen-fixing
crop, often alfalfa in
cooler climates and soybeans in regions with longer
summers. Sometimes a third crop, winter
wheat, is added to the rotation. Fields are usually plowed each
year, although no-till
farming is increasing in use. Many of the maize varieties grown
in the United States and Canada are hybrids. Over half of the corn
area planted in the United States has been genetically
modified using biotechnology to express
agronomic traits such as pest resistance or herbicide
resistance.
Before about World War
II, most maize in North America was harvested by hand (as it
still is in most of the other countries where it is grown). This
often involved large numbers of workers and associated social
events. Some one- and two-row mechanical pickers were in use but
the corn combine
was not adopted until after the War. By hand or mechanical picker,
the entire ear is harvested which then requires a separate
operation of a corn sheller to remove the kernels from the ear.
Whole ears of corn were often stored in corn cribs and these whole
ears are a sufficient form for some livestock feeding use. Few
modern farms store maize in this manner. Most harvest the grain
from the field and store it in bins. The combine with a corn head
(with points and snap rolls instead of a reel) does not cut the
stalk; it simply pulls the stalk down. The stalk continues downward
and is crumpled in to a mangled pile on the ground. The ear of corn
is too large to pass through a slit in a plate and the snap rolls
pull the ear of corn from the stalk so that only the ear and husk
enter the machinery. The combine separates out the husk and the
cob, keeping only the kernels.
Pellagra
When maize was first introduced outside of the Americas it was generally welcomed with enthusiasm by farmers everywhere for its productivity. However, a widespread problem of malnutrition soon arose wherever maize was introduced. This was a mystery since these types of malnutrition were not seen among the indigenous Americans under normal circumstances.It was eventually discovered that the indigenous
Americans learned long ago to add alkali — in the form of ashes
among North Americans and lime (calcium
carbonate) among Mesoamericans
— to corn meal to liberate the B-vitamin niacin, the lack of which was the
underlying cause of the condition known as pellagra. This alkali process
is known by its Nahuatl (Aztec)-derived name: nixtamalization.
Besides the lack of niacin, pellagra was also
characterized by protein
deficiency, a result of the inherent lack of two key amino acids in
pre-modern maize, lysine
and tryptophan.
Nixtamalisation was also found to increase the lysine and
tryptophan content of maize to some extent, but more importantly,
the indigenous Americans had learned long ago to balance their
consumption of maize with beans and other protein sources
such as amaranth and
chia, as well as meat and
fish, in order to acquire the complete range of amino acids for
normal protein synthesis.
Since maize had been introduced into the diet of
non-indigenous Americans without the necessary cultural knowledge
acquired over thousands of years in the Americas, the reliance on
maize elsewhere was often tragic. In the late 19th century pellagra
reached endemic proportions in parts of the deep southern U.S., as
medical researchers debated two theories for its origin: the
deficiency theory (eventually shown to be true) posited that
pellagra was due to a deficiency of some nutrient, and the germ
theory posited that pellagra was caused by a germ transmitted by
stable flies. In 1914 the U.S. government officially endorsed the
germ theory of pellagra, but rescinded this endorsement several
years later as evidence grew against it. By the mid-1920s the
deficiency theory of pellagra was becoming scientific consensus,
and the theory was proved in 1932 when niacin deficiency was
determined to be the cause of the illness.
Once alkali processing and dietary variety was
understood and applied, pellagra disappeared. The development of
high lysine maize and the promotion of a more balanced diet has
also contributed to its demise.
Pests
Insect pests
- Corn earworm (Helicoverpa zea)
- Fall armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda)
- Common armyworm (Pseudaletia unipuncta)
- Stalk borer (Papaipema nebris)
- Corn leaf aphid (Rhopalosiphum maidis)
- European corn borer (Ostrinia nubilalis) (ECB)
- Corn silkfly (Euxesta stigmatis)
- Lesser cornstalk borer (Elasmopalpus lignosellus)
- Corn delphacid (Peregrinus maidis)
- Western corn rootworm (Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte)
The susceptibility of maize to the European corn
borer, and the resulting large crop losses, led to the development
of transgenic
expressing the Bacillus
thuringiensis toxin. "Bt corn" is widely grown in the United
States and has been approved for release in Europe.
Diseases
- Corn smut or common smut (Ustilago maydis): a fungal disease, known in Mexico as huitlacoche, which is prized by some as a gourmet delicacy in itself.
- Maize Dwarf Mosaic Virus
- Stewart's Wilt (Pantoea stewartii)
- Common Rust (Puccinia sorghi)
- Goss's Wilt (Clavibacter michiganese)
- Grey Leaf Spot
- Mal de Río Cuarto Virus (MRCV)
- Stalk and Kernal Rot
Uses
In the United States and Canada, the primary use
for maize is as a feed for livestock, forage, silage or
grain. "Feed corn" is being used increasingly for heating;
specialized corn stoves
(similar to wood stoves)
are available and use either feed corn or wood pellets to generate
heat. Silage
is made by fermentation of chopped green cornstalks. The grain also
has many industrial uses, including transformation into plastics
and fabrics. Some is hydrolyzed and enzymatically
treated to produce syrups, particularly high fructose corn syrup, a
sweetener, and some is fermented and distilled to produce grain
alcohol. Grain alcohol from maize is traditionally the source
of bourbon
whiskey. Increasingly ethanol is being used at low
concentrations (10% or less) as an additive in gasoline (gasohol) for motor fuels to
increase the octane
rating, lower pollutants, and reduce petroleum use (what is
nowadays also known as "biofuels" and has been
generating an intense debate regarding the human beings' necessity
of new sources of energy, on the one hand, and the need to
maintain, in regions such as Latin America, the food habits and
culture which has been the essence of civilizations such as the one
originated in Mesoamerica; the entry, January 2008, of maize among
the commercial agreements of
NAFTA has increased this debate, considering the bad labor
conditions of workers in the fields, and mainly the fact that NAFTA
"opened the doors to the import of corn from the United States,
where the farmers who grow it receive multi-million dollar
subsidies and other government supports. (...) According to OXFAM
UK, after NAFTA went into effect, the price of maize in Mexico fell
70% between 1994 and 2001. The number of farm jobs dropped as well:
from 8.1 million in 1993 to 6.8 million in 2002. Many of those who
found themselves without work were small-scale maize growers.").
However, introduction in the northern latitudes of the US of
tropical
maize for biofuels, and not for human or animal consumption,
may potentially alleviate this. Human consumption of corn and
cornmeal constitutes a
staple
food in many regions of the world. Corn meal is made into a
thick porridge in many
cultures: from the polenta of Italy, the angu of
Brazil, the
mămăligă
of Romania,
to mush in
the U.S. or the food called sadza, nshima, ugali and mealie pap in
Africa. It is the main ingredient for tortillas, atole and many other dishes of
Mexican
food, and for chicha,
a fermented beverage of Central
and South
America. The eating of corn on the cob varies culturally. It is
common in the United States but virtually unheard of in some
European countries.
Sweetcorn is a
genetic variation that is high in sugars and low in starch that is
served like a vegetable. Popcorn is kernels
of certain varieties that explode when heated, forming fluffy
pieces that are eaten as a snack.
Maize can also be prepared as hominy, in which the kernels are
bleached with lye; or
grits, which are coarsely
ground corn. These are commonly eaten in the Southeastern
United States, foods handed down from
Native Americans. Another common food made from maize is
corn
flakes. The floury meal of maize (cornmeal or masa) is used to make cornbread and Mexican tortillas. Teosinte is used
as fodder, and can also
be popped as popcorn.
Some forms of the plant are occasionally grown
for ornamental use in the garden. For this purpose, variegated and
coloured leaf forms as well as those with colourful ears are used.
Additionally, size-superlative varieties, having reached 31 ft
(9.4m) tall, or with ears 24 inches (60cm) long, have been popular
for at least a century.
Corncobs can be hollowed out and treated to make
inexpensive smoking
pipes, first manufactured in the United States in 1869.
Corncobs are also used as a biomass fuel source. Maize is
relatively cheap and home-heating furnaces have been developed
which use maize kernels as a fuel. They feature a large hopper
which feeds the uniformly sized corn kernels (or wood pellets or
cherry pits) into the
fire.
An unusual use for maize is to create a maize
maze as a tourist attraction. This is a maze cut into a field of maize. The
idea of a maize maze was introduced by Adrian
Fisher, one of the most prolific designers of modern mazes,
with The American Maze Company who created a maze in Pennsylvania
in 1993. Traditional mazes are most commonly grown using yew hedges,
but these take several years to mature. The rapid growth of a field
of maize allows a maze to be laid out using GPS
at the start of a growing season and for the maize to grow tall
enough to obstruct a visitor's line of sight by the start of the
summer. In Canada and the U.S., these are called "corn mazes" and
are popular in many farming communities.
Maize is increasingly used as a biomass fuel, such as ethanol,
which as researchers search for innovative ways to reduce fuel
costs, has unintentionally caused a rapid rise in food costs. This
has led to the 2007 harvest being one of the most profitable corn
crops in modern history for farmers. A biomass
gasification power plant in Strem near Güssing,
Burgenland,
Austria was
begun in 2005. Research is being done to make diesel out of the biogas by the
Fischer
Tropsch method.
As a result of the US
Federal Government announcing its production target of 35
billion gallons of biofuels by 2017, ethanol
production will grow to 7 billion gallons by 2010, up from 4.5
billion in 2006, boosting ethanol's share of corn demand in the US
from 22.6 percent to 36.1 percent .
Maize is also used as fish
bait called "dough balls". It is particularly popular in
Europe for
coarse
fishing.
Stigmas from female corn flowers, known popularly
as corn silk, are sold as herbal supplements.
Corn kernels can be used in place of sand in a
sandbox-like enclosure
for children's play.
further Corn
construction
In art
Maize has been an essential crop in the Andes since the pre-Columbian Era. The Moche culture from Northern Peru made ceramics from earth, water, and fire. This pottery was a sacred substance, formed in significant shapes and used to represent important themes. Maize represented anthropomorphically as well as naturally.See also
Notes and references
- Ferro, D.N. and Weber, D.C. Managing Sweet Corn Pests in Massachusetts
- ITIS 42268 as of 22 September 2002
- A list of Zea taxonomic names This list is of historical interest to taxonomists. It is largely of no practical use because many or most are based on single-gene mutations and if completed would be thousands of entries long. Modern classifications are available that are of great utility.
External links
- A Zillion Uses for Corn
- CropVillage podcast for corn, soybean, and wheat
- NCGA Corn Industry Statistics
- Image of Zea mays from Flora von Deutschland Österreich und der Schweiz
- Zea mays at Plants For A Future
- Usage of Iowa and U.S. Corn Crop
- How a Corn Plant Develops
- Maize Genetics and Genomics Database project
- The Maize Genome Sequence Browser
- International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center
- Maize of Guatemala
- Maize research at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA)
- Tropical maize could become biofuel 'super' crop in the US
- Jala Giant Corn (longest cob)
- European corn borer An ingenious pest
- Processing corn from seed to harvest to table
- The Great Corn Adventure - University of Illinois Extension
- [http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:sQslLwgXymUJ:counties.cce.cornell.edu/monroe/nutrition/Farmers%2520Market%2520Recipes/Corn_final.pdf+corn+nutrition+facts&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=7&gl=us Corn Facts]
- Articles on maize written by Cristina Barros and Marco Buenrostro at their "Itacate" (the Nahuatl word for traveling provisions), in La Jornada, the Mexican journal
- ("Sin maíz no hay país", i.e., "There is no country without maize") This is a Mexican campaign defending the alimentary sovereignty and the reactivation of the Mexican field
corn in Arabic: ذرة (نبات)
corn in Aragonese: Panizo
corn in Asturian: Zea mais
corn in Aymara: Tunqu
corn in Bambara: Kaba
corn in Min Nan: Hoan-be̍h
corn in Bulgarian: Царевица
corn in Catalan: Dacsa
corn in Czech: Kukuřice
corn in Danish: Majs
corn in German: Mais
corn in Estonian: Mais
corn in Modern Greek (1453-): Καλαμπόκι
corn in Spanish: Zea mays
corn in Esperanto: Maizo
corn in Basque: Arto
corn in Persian: ذرت
corn in French: Maïs
corn in Western Frisian: Stynske weet
corn in Galician: Millo
corn in Korean: 옥수수
corn in Hindi: मक्का (फसल)
corn in Upper Sorbian: Kukurica
corn in Croatian: Kukuruz
corn in Ido: Maizo
corn in Indonesian: Jagung
corn in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Mais
corn in Ossetian: Нартхор
corn in Icelandic: Maís
corn in Italian: Zea mays
corn in Hebrew: תירס
corn in Javanese: Jagung
corn in Georgian: სიმინდი
corn in Swahili (macrolanguage): Mhindi
corn in Haitian: Mayi
corn in Kurdish: Lazût
corn in Latin: Zea Mays
corn in Lithuanian: Paprastasis kukurūzas
corn in Ligurian: Granon
corn in Lingala: Lisángú
corn in Lojban: zumri
corn in Hungarian: Kukorica
corn in Malay (macrolanguage): Pokok
Jagung
corn in Dutch: Maïs
corn in Japanese: トウモロコシ
corn in Neapolitan: Granone
corn in Norwegian: Mais
corn in Occitan (post 1500): Milh
corn in Polish: Kukurydza zwyczajna
corn in Portuguese: Milho
corn in Romanian: Porumb
corn in Quechua: Sara
corn in Russian: Кукуруза
corn in Simple English: Maize
corn in Slovak: Kukurica siata
corn in Slovenian: Koruza
corn in Serbian: Кукуруз
corn in Finnish: Maissi
corn in Swedish: Majs
corn in Tamil: சோளம்
corn in Thai: ข้าวโพด
corn in Vietnamese: Ngô
corn in Tonga (Tonga Islands): Koane
corn in Cherokee: ᏎᎷ
corn in Turkish: Mısır (bitki)
corn in Ukrainian: Кукурудза
corn in Venetian: Formenton
corn in Walloon: Dinrêye
corn in Contenese: 粟米
corn in Chinese: 玉米
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Joe Miller, aftergrass, anhydrate, bamboo, banality, barley, benign tumor, bird seed,
blast-freeze, boil,
bran, brine, bromide, bump, bunion, callosity, callus, cancer, cane, carbuncle, carcinoma, cat food, cereal, cereal plant, chestnut, chicken feed,
chop, cliche, commonplace, commonplace
expression, cure, cyst, dehydrate, desiccate, dilatation, dilation, distension, dog food,
dry, dry-cure, dry-salt,
eatage, edema, embalm, ensilage, evaporate, excrescence, familiar tune,
farinaceous plant, feed,
fodder, fog, forage, forage grass, freeze, freeze-dry, fume, fungosity, fungus, furuncle, grain, graminaceous plant,
grass, growth, hackneyed saying,
hay, intumescence, irradiate, jerk, joke with whiskers, kipper, lawn grass, lieu commun,
locus communis, lump,
malignant growth, marinade, marinate, mash, meal, metastatic tumor, mole, morbid growth, mummify, neoplasm, nevus, nonmalignant tumor,
oats, old joke, old saw,
old song, old story, old turkey, old wheeze, ornamental grass,
outgrowth, pasturage, pasture, pet food, pickle, pimple, platitude, pock, preservatize, prosaicism, prosaism, prose, proud flesh, provender, pustule, quick-freeze, reed, refrigerate, reiteration, retold story,
rising, salt, sarcoma, scratch, scratch feed, season, sebaceous cyst, silage, slops, smoke, smoke-cure, stereotyped
saying, straw, stuff, swell, swelling, swill, swollenness, trite joke,
trite saying, triticism, tumefaction, tumescence, tumidity, tumor, turgescence, turgescency, turgidity, twice-told tale,
verruca, warmed-over
cabbage, wart, wen, wheat