Some of you may have heard the recent news about this study, by Consumer Reports. Because their results are neither statistically robust nor peer reviewed, it's ill-advised to extrapolate too far, but they found that many rice products may contain dangerous levels of arsenic.
If you're wondering why rice is a topic in a blog about "Harvey Park Plants", I'm writing about it precisely because rice does not grow here at all. Unlike many other grains like wheat and corn, and pseudo-grains like quinoa, rice is essentially impossible to grow in Colorado. Traditional practice requires that a rice field, or paddy, be totally flooded at least twice during the growing season, which is impractical if not impossible here. Because we can't grow rice, we are forced to buy it if we want to eat it, which means we don't always know where it came from or how it was grown.
Most rice available in the US comes from the Southeastern states, California, or Southeast Asia. Based on the study's findings, rice from the southeast had the most arsenic and rice from Asia had the least, while Californian rice was somewhere in the middle. Perhaps not surprisingly, brown rice, which contains more vitamins and minerals than white rice, also had more arsenic across the board. A more surprising finding is that there seems to be no difference between organic and non-organic rice.
The reason for this isn't due to how the rice is grown, so much as it is due to how cotton is grown (stay with me here). Cotton has historically been the major cash crop of the Old South. However, cotton just so happens to be one of the most pest and disease prone crops that we grow, so commercial cotton fields use more synthetic chemicals than just about any other farm industry. One of the pesticides with a long history of use in cotton is the fun-sounding lead arsenate. Because both lead and arsenic are elements, they don't degrade, and remain in the field forever, or at least until they leach out, wash away, or get taken up by plants. (Incidentally, lead arsenate was slowly phased out in the 1950s, in favor of the equally fun DDT, though it wasn't actually banned until 1988).
However, with the invention of polyester fabric in 1941, demand for cotton fell and fields began being converted to other uses, including rice, which became a much more attractive crop in the United States after malaria was eradicated (by DDT). Thus, American rice tends to be grown in places where cotton was grown just a few short decades earlier, with its host of chemical pesticides. Thus, its no surprise that even organic rice, which is getting no current chemical input, is still paying the price of our long legacy of pesticide use.
Asia, meanwhile, has grown rice organically for millennia, and never grew cotton. While its rice also has SOME arsenic, the levels are much lower, and are at least somewhat attributable to naturally occurring arsenic in soil.
To summarize, where and how your food was grown DOES matter, though not always in the ways you might expect. Buying Asian grown rice might be safer in terms of arsenic, but on the other hand, that rice has to be shipped much further to get to you, incurring other costs. There seems to be no "easy" or "right" answer here, though it does seem clear that our use of synthetic chemicals can have long-lasting unforeseen consequences.
For more information, you can also check out the FDA website devoted to arsenic in rice.
News and information about plants in the Harvey Park neighborhood of Denver, Colorado.
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Native Trees
Fall's nearly here, which means it's time to plant trees! There are lots of great options, but which are native to Colorado? As I've written before, there wouldn't have been any trees in Harvey Park before the 1950s, at least north of the 3300 S block. So if you're looking for a Harvey Park native tree, the closest you can get would be those that were down in the Bear Creek Valley.
Friday, August 31, 2012
Why xeriscaping doesn't have to mean "zeroscaping"
If you hear the word "xeriscaping" without seeing it written, chances are good that you mishear the word "zeroscaping", which isn't really a word at all. It's not a difficult mistake to make, since "zero" is a pretty common word in english, while "xeric" is a term that's very rarely used outside of ecology, like its sister words "mesic" and "hydric". The three words describe three different habitat types: dry, medium, and wet, respectively. Therefore, the word "xeriscaping" doesn't mean "nothingscaping"; it just means "dryscaping". FYI, if you feel like writing a flatulent poem about xeriscaping, it rhymes with "air escaping".
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
The Ecology of Garden Slugs
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Plant Spotlight - Tree of Heaven
Common Name: Tree of Heaven, Ailanthus, Chinese Sumac, Stink Tree, Tree from Hell, Ghetto Palm
Plant Family: Simaroubaceae, the Tree of Heaven family
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Plant Research - Ground Cover
The Methods: Researchers started with old, grassy fields in Pennsylvania and then created four treatments. The four treatments were "mowed lawn", "bark mulch", "gravel mulch", and "unmowed old field". Reserchers set up the plots one year, and monitored the plots the two following years for a variety of soil characteristics.
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Plant News - Japanese Beetles
Plant Spotlight - Redroot Amaranth
Common Name: redroot amaranth, redroot pigweed
Plant Family: Amaranthaceae, the amaranth family
Monday, August 20, 2012
Harvey Park, pre-settlers
As you can see from archival photos, Harvey Park of the 50s looked very different than the Harvey Park of today. The biggest difference, to my eyes, is that there were no trees. Before that though, there were no houses, and Harvey Park was a ranch, roamed by herds of cattle. Before even that, Harvey Park was home to the native Colorado shortgrass prairie.
Though there are many plant species that make up the shortgrass prairie, the landscape would have been largely dominated by just these two warm-season, C4 grasses:
Blue gramma - Bouteloua gracilis
Though there are many plant species that make up the shortgrass prairie, the landscape would have been largely dominated by just these two warm-season, C4 grasses:
Blue gramma - Bouteloua gracilis
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Colorado Noxious Weeds
The Colorado Department of Agriculture publishes a list of the "worst" noxious weeds in the state. It separates them into List A, List B, List C, and Watch List, from "most noxious" to "least noxious" respectively. You can see the full list here, but I've compiled a short(er) list of plants that you might expect to see in Harvey Park, or Denver in general. I'd hope that if you think you have some of them growing in your yard (accidentally or deliberately), you'll consider removing them as quickly and aggressively as possible. While some of these plants have more benign lookalikes, quite a few of them have lookalikes that are also nasty weeds. Please google these plants or search for them on the Colorado DoA website for more information about how to identify them, why they're a problem, and how to best get rid of them.
List A
Myrtle spurge - Euphorbia myrsinites
Purple Loostrife - Lythrum salicaria
List A
Myrtle spurge - Euphorbia myrsinites
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