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Sugar beet

A sugar beet is a plant whose root contains a high concentration of sucrose and which is grown commercially for sugar production. In plant breeding, it is known as the Altissima cultivar group of the common beet (Beta vulgaris).[1] Together with other beet cultivars, such as beetroot and chard, it belongs to the subspecies Beta vulgaris subsp. vulgaris but classified as var. saccharifera . Its closest wild relative is the sea beet (Beta vulgaris subsp. maritima).[2]

Sugar beet
Sugar beet, illustration of root, leaf, and flowering patterns
SpeciesBeta vulgaris
SubspeciesBeta vulgaris subsp. vulgaris (var. saccharifera)
Cultivar groupAltissima Group
OriginSilesia, mid-18th century

Sugar beets are grown in climates that are too cold for sugarcane. In 2020, Russia, the United States, Germany, France and Turkey were the world's five largest sugar beet producers.[3] In 2010–2011, Europe, and North America except Arctic territories failed to supply the overall domestic demand for sugar and were all net importers of sugar.[4] The US harvested 1,004,600 acres (406,547 ha) of sugar beets in 2008.[5] In 2009, sugar beets accounted for 20% of the world's sugar production[6] and nearly 30% by 2013.[7] Sugarcane accounts for most of the rest of sugar produced globally.

Description edit

The sugar beet has a conical, white, fleshy root (a taproot) with a flat crown. The plant consists of the root and a rosette of leaves. Sugar is formed by photosynthesis in the leaves and is then stored in the root.

The root of the beet contains 75% water, about 20%[7] sugar, and 5% pulp.[8] The exact sugar content can vary between 12% and 21%, depending on the cultivar and growing conditions. Sugar is the primary value of sugar beet as a cash crop. The pulp, insoluble in water and mainly composed of cellulose, hemicellulose, lignin, and pectin, is used in animal feed. The byproducts of the sugar beet crop, such as pulp and molasses, add another 10% to the value of the harvest.[6]

Sugar beets grow exclusively in the temperate zone, in contrast to sugarcane, which grows exclusively in the tropical and subtropical zones. The average weight of a sugar beet ranges between 0.5 and 1 kg (1.1 and 2.2 lb). Sugar beet foliage has a rich, brilliant green color and grows to a height of about 35 cm (14 in). The leaves are numerous and broad and grow in a tuft from the crown of the beet, which is usually level with or just above the ground surface.[9]

History of the sugar beet edit

Discovery of beet sugar edit

 
A geneticist evaluates sugar beet plants
 
French sugar beet mill in operation in the 1840s

The species beet consists of several cultivar groups. The 16th-century French scientist Olivier de Serres discovered a process for preparing sugar syrup from (red) beetroot. He wrote: "The beet-root, when being boiled, yields a juice similar to syrup of sugar, which is beautiful to look at on account of its vermilion colour"[10] (1575).[11] Because crystallized cane sugar was already available and had a better taste, this process did not become popular.

Modern sugar beets date to the mid-18th century Silesia where Frederick the Great, king of Prussia, subsidized experiments to develop processes for sugar extraction.[12][13] In 1747, Andreas Sigismund Marggraf, professor of physics in the Academy of Science of Berlin, isolated sugar from beetroots and found them at concentrations of 1.3–1.6%.[14] He also demonstrated that the sugar that could be extracted from beets was identical to that produced from cane.[13] He found the best of these vegetable sources for sugar was the white beet.[15] Despite Marggraf's success in isolating sugar from beets, it did not lead to commercial sugar production.

Development of the Sugar beet edit

Marggraf's student and successor Franz Karl Achard began plant breeding sugar beet in Kaulsdorf near Berlin in 1786.[16] Achard started his plant breeding by evaluating 23 varieties of beet for sugar content.[17] In the end he selected a local strain from Halberstadt in modern-day Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Moritz Baron von Koppy and his son further selected white, conical tubers from this strain.[14] The selection was named weiße schlesische Zuckerrübe, meaning white Silesian sugar beet.[16] In about 1800, this cultivar boasted about 5–6% sucrose by (dry) weight.[18] It would go on to be the progenitor of all modern sugar beets.[16] The plant breeding process has continued since then, leading to a sucrose content of around 18% in modern varieties.[7]

History of the beet sugar industry edit

Franz Karl Achard opened the world's first beet sugar factory in 1801, at Kunern, Silesia (now Konary, Poland).[9] The idea to produce sugar from beet was soon introduced to France, whence the European sugar beet industry rapidly expanded. By 1840, about 5% of the world's sugar was derived from sugar beets, and by 1880, this number had risen more than tenfold to over 50%.[12] In North America, the first commercial production started in 1879 at a farm in Alvarado, California.[13][14] The sugar beet was introduced to Chile by German settlers around 1850.[14]

Culture edit

 
A sugar beet farm in Switzerland
 
Worldwide sugar beet production
 
A beet harvester

The sugar beet, like sugarcane, needs a particular soil and a proper climate for its successful cultivation. The most important requirements are that the soil must contain a large supply of nutrients, be rich in humus, and be able to contain a great deal of moisture. A certain amount of alkali is not necessarily detrimental, as sugar beets are not especially susceptible to injury by some alkali. The ground should be fairly level and well-drained, especially where irrigation is practiced.[9]

Generous crops can be grown in both sandy soil and heavy loams, but the ideal soil is a sandy loam, i.e., a mixture of organic matter, clay and sand. A subsoil of gravel, or the presence of hardpan, is not desirable, as cultivation to a depth of from 12 to 15 inches (30 to 38 cm) is necessary to produce the best results.

Climatic conditions, temperature, sunshine, rainfall and winds have an important bearing upon the success of sugar beet agriculture. A temperature ranging from 15 to 21 °C (59 to 70 °F) during the growing months is most favorable. In the absence of adequate irrigation, 460 mm (18 inches) of rainfall are necessary to raise an average crop. High winds are harmful, as they generally crust the land and prevent the young beets from coming through the ground. The best results are obtained along the coast of southern California, where warm, sunny days succeeded by cool, foggy nights seem to meet sugar beet's favored growth conditions. Sunshine of long duration but not of great intensity is the most important factor in the successful cultivation of sugar beets. Near the equator, the shorter days and the greater heat of the sun sharply reduce the sugar content in the beet.[9]

In high elevation regions such as those of Idaho, Colorado and Utah, where the temperature is high during the daytime, but where the nights are cool, the quality of the sugar beet is excellent. In Michigan, the long summer days from the relatively high latitude (the Lower Peninsula, where production is concentrated, lies between the 41st and 46th parallels North) and the influence of the Great Lakes result in satisfactory climatic conditions for sugar beet culture. Sebewaing, Michigan, lies in the Thumb region of Michigan; both the region and state are major sugar beet producers. Sebewaing is home to one of four Michigan Sugar Company factories. The town sponsors an annual Michigan Sugar Festival.[19][unreliable source?]

To cultivate beets successfully, the land must be properly prepared. Deep ploughing is the first principle of beet culture. It allows the roots to penetrate the subsoil without much obstruction, thereby preventing the beet from growing out of the ground, besides enabling it to extract considerable nourishment and moisture from the lower soil. If the latter is too hard, the roots will not penetrate it readily and, as a result, the plant will be pushed up and out of the earth during the process of growth. A hard subsoil is impervious to water and prevents proper drainage. It should not be too loose, however, as this allows the water to pass through more freely than is desirable. Ideally, the soil should be deep, fairly fine and easily penetrable by the roots. It should also be capable of retaining moisture and at the same time admit of a free circulation of air and good drainage. Sugar beet crops exhaust the soil rapidly. Crop rotation is recommended and necessary. Normally, beets are grown in the same ground every third year, peas, beans or grain being raised the other two years.[9]

In most temperate climates, beets are planted in the spring and harvested in the autumn. At the northern end of its range, growing seasons as short as 100 days can produce commercially viable sugar beet crops. In warmer climates, such as in California's Imperial Valley, sugar beets are a winter crop, planted in the autumn and harvested in the spring. In recent years, Syngenta has developed the so-called tropical sugar beet. It allows the plant to grow in tropical and subtropical regions. Beets are planted from a small seed; 1 kg (2.2 lb) of beet seed comprises 100,000 seeds and will plant over one hectare (2.5 acres) of ground (one pound or 0.45 kilograms will plant about one acre or 0.40 hectares.

Until the latter half of the 20th century, sugar beet production was highly labor-intensive, as weed control was managed by densely planting the crop, which then had to be manually thinned two or three times with a hoe during the growing season. Harvesting also required many workers. Although the roots could be lifted by a plough-like device which could be pulled by a horse team, the rest of the preparation was by hand. One laborer grabbed the beets by their leaves, knocked them together to shake free loose soil, and then laid them in a row, root to one side, greens to the other. A second worker equipped with a beet hook (a short-handled tool between a billhook and a sickle) followed behind, and would lift the beet and swiftly chop the crown and leaves from the root with a single action. Working this way, he would leave a row of beets that could be forked into the back of a cart.

Today, mechanical sowing, herbicide application for weed control, and mechanical harvesting have displaced this reliance on manual farm work. A root beater uses a series of blades to chop the leaf and crown (which is high in nonsugar impurities) from the root. The beet harvester lifts the root, and removes excess soil from the root in a single pass over the field. A modern harvester is typically able to cover six rows at the same time. The beets are dumped into trucks as the harvester rolls down the field, and then delivered to the factory. The conveyor then removes more soil.

If the beets are to be left for later delivery, they are formed into clamps. Straw bales are used to shield the beets from the weather. Provided the clamp is well built with the right amount of ventilation, the beets do not significantly deteriorate. Beets that freeze and then defrost, produce complex carbohydrates that cause severe production problems in the factory. In the UK, loads may be hand examined at the factory gate before being accepted.

In the US, the fall harvest begins with the first hard frost, which arrests photosynthesis and the further growth of the root. Depending on the local climate, it may be carried out over the course of a few weeks or be prolonged throughout the winter months. The harvest and processing of the beet is referred to as "the campaign", reflecting the organization required to deliver the crop at a steady rate to processing factories that run 24 hours a day for the duration of the harvest and processing (for the UK, the campaign lasts about five months). In the Netherlands, this period is known as de bietencampagne, a time to be careful when driving on local roads in the area while the beets are being grown, because the naturally high clay content of the soil tends to cause slippery roads when soil falls from the trailers during transport.

Production statistics edit

Top ten sugar beet producers—2020 (FAO)[3]
Rank Country Production
(million tonnes)
1   Russia 33.9
2   United States 30.5
3   Germany 28.6
4   France 26.2
5   Turkey 23.0
6   Poland 14.2
7   Egypt 13.0
8   China 11.6
9   Ukraine 9.2
10   Netherlands 6.7
Total World 252.9
 
Sugar beet output in 2009

The world harvested 252,968,843 metric tons (249,000,000 long tons; 278,900,000 short tons) of sugar beets in 2020. The world's largest producer was Russia, with a 33,915,086 metric tons (33,400,000 long tons; 37,400,000 short tons) harvest.[3] The average yield of sugar beet crops worldwide was 58.2 tonnes per hectare.

The most productive sugar beet farms in the world, in 2010, were in Chile, with a nationwide average yield of 87.3 tonnes per hectare.[20]

Imperial Valley (California) farmers have achieved yields of about 160 tonnes per hectare and over 26 tonnes sugar per hectare. Imperial Valley farms benefit from high intensities of incident sunlight and intensive use of irrigation and fertilizers.[21][22]

From sugar beet to white sugar edit

 
A sugar beet farm in Belgium: Beyond the field is the sugar factory.

Most sugar beet are used to create white sugar. This is done in a beet sugar factory, often abbreviated to sugar factory. Nowadays these most of the time also act as a sugar refinery, but historically the beet sugar factory produced raw sugar and the sugar refinery refined raw sugar to create white sugar.

Sugar factory edit

In the 1960s, beet sugar processing was described as consisting of these steps.[23]

  • Harvesting and storage in a way that preserves the beet while they wait to be processed
  • Washing and scrubbing to remove soil and debris
  • Slicing the beet in small pieces called cossettes or chips
  • Removing the sugar from the beet in an osmosis process, resulting in raw juice and beet pulp.[23]

Nowadays, most sugar factories then refine the raw juice themselves, without moving it to a sugar refinery. The beet pulp is processed on site to become cattle fodder.

Sugar refinery edit

 
The Chelsea Sugar Refinery in New Zealand

The next steps to produce white sugar are not specific for producing sugar from sugar beet. They also apply to producing white sugar from sugar cane. As such, they belong to the sugar refining process, not to the beet sugar production process per se.

  • Purification, the raw juice undergoes a chemical process to remove impurities and create thin juice.[24]
  • Evaporation, the thin juice is concentrated by evaporation to make a "thick juice", roughly 60% sucrose by weight.
  • Crystallization, by boiling under reduced pressure the sugar liquor is turned into crystals and remaining liquor.[25]
  • Centrifugation, in a centrifuge the white sugar crystals are separated from the remaining sugar liquor.[26]
  • The remaining liquor is then boiled and centrifuged, producing a lower grade of crystallised sugar (which is redissolved to feed the white sugar pans) and molasses.[26]
  • Further sugar can be recovered from the molasses eg by the Steffen Process.

Ethanol and alcohol edit

From molasses edit

 
Tuzemák, a sugar-beet-based alcohol from Czechia

There are two obvious methods to produce alcohol (ethanol) from sugar beet. The first method produces alcohol as a byproduct of manufacturing sugar. It is about fermenting the sugar beet molasses that are left after (the second) centrifugation.[27] This strongly resembles the manufacture of rum from sugar cane molasses. In a number of countries, notably the Czech Republic and Slovakia, this analogy led to making a rum-like distilled spirit called Tuzemak.[28] On the Åland Islands, a similar drink is made under the brand name Kobba Libre.

From sugar beet edit

The second method to produce alcohol from sugar beet is to ferment the sugar beet themselves. I.e. without attempting to produce sugar. The idea to distill sugar from the beet came up soon after the first beet sugar factory was established.[27] In 1852-1854 Champonnois devised a good system to distill alcohol from sugar beet.[29] Within a few years a large sugar distilling industry was created in France.[27] The current process to produce alcohol by fermenting and distilling sugar beet consists of these steps:[30]

Large sugar beet distilleries remain limited to Europe. In 2023 Tereos had 8 beet sugar distilleries, located in France, Czechia and Romania.[31]

In many European countries rectified spirit from sugar beet is used to make Liquor, e.g. vodka, Gin etc..

Other uses edit

Sugary syrup edit

 
Traditional Dutch stroop and the bottled version

An unrefined sugary syrup can be produced directly from sugar beet. This thick, dark syrup is produced by cooking shredded sugar beet for several hours, then pressing the resulting mash and concentrating the juice produced until it has a consistency similar to that of honey. No other ingredients are used.

In Germany, particularly the Rhineland area, and in the Netherlands, this sugar beet syrup (called Zuckerrüben-Sirup or Zapp in German, or Suikerstroop in Dutch) is used as a spread for sandwiches, as well as for sweetening sauces, cakes and desserts. Dutch people generally top their pancakes with stroop.

Suikerstroop made according to the Dutch tradition is a Traditional Speciality Guaranteed under EU and UK law.[32] Commercially, if the syrup has a dextrose equivalency (DE) above 30, the product has to be hydrolyzed and converted to a high-fructose syrup, much like high-fructose corn syrup, or isoglucose syrup in the EU.

Uridine edit

Uridine can be isolated from sugar beet.

Alternative fuel edit

BP and Associated British Foods plan to use agricultural surpluses of sugar beet to produce biobutanol in East Anglia in the United Kingdom.

The feedstock-to-yield ratio for sugarbeet is 56:9. Therefore, it takes 6.22 kg of sugar beet to produce 1 kg of ethanol (approximately 1.27 L at room temperature). In 2006 it was found that producing ethanol from sugar beet or cane became profitable when market prices for ethanol were close to $4 per gallon.[33]

Cattle feed edit

In New Zealand, sugar beet is widely grown and harvested as feed for dairy cattle. It is regarded as superior to fodder beet, because it has a lower water content (resulting in better storage properties). Both the beet bulb and the leaves (with 25% protein) are fed to cattle. Although long considered toxic to cattle, harvested beet bulbs can be fed to cattle if they are appropriately transitioned to their new diet. Dairy cattle in New Zealand can thrive on just pasture and beets, without silage or other supplementary feed. The crop is also now grown in some parts of Australia as cattle feed.[34][35]

Monosodium glutamate edit

Molasses can serve to produce monosodium glutamate (MSG).

Agriculture edit

 
Sugar beet farming using dam culture method. Used in Russia, Germany, France, Ukraine, Turkey, China, Poland, and sometimes Egypt.

Sugar beets are an important part of a crop rotation cycle.

Sugar beet plants are susceptible to Rhizomania ("root madness"), which turns the bulbous tap root into many small roots, making the crop economically unprocessable. Strict controls are enforced in European countries to prevent the spread, but it is already present in some areas. It is also susceptible to both the beet leaf curl virus, which causes crinkling and stunting of the leaves and beet yellows virus.

Continual research looks for varieties with resistance, as well as increased sugar yield. Sugar beet breeding research in the United States is most prominently conducted at various USDA Agricultural Research Stations, including one in Fort Collins, Colorado, headed by Linda Hanson and Leonard Panella; one in Fargo, North Dakota, headed by John Wieland; and one at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan, headed by Rachel Naegele.

Other economically important members of the subfamily Chenopodioideae:

Genetic modification edit

In the United States, genetically modified sugar beets, engineered for resistance to glyphosate, a herbicide marketed as Roundup, were developed by Monsanto as a genetically modified crop. In 2005, the US Department of Agriculture-Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (USDA-APHIS) deregulated glyphosate-resistant sugar beets after it conducted an environmental assessment and determined glyphosate-resistant sugar beets were highly unlikely to become a plant pest.[36][37] Sugar from glyphosate-resistant sugar beets has been approved for human and animal consumption in multiple countries, but commercial production of biotech beets has been approved only in the United States and Canada. Studies have concluded the sugar from glyphosate-resistant sugar beets has the same nutritional value as sugar from conventional sugar beets.[38] After deregulation in 2005, glyphosate-resistant sugar beets were extensively adopted in the United States. About 95% of sugar beet acres in the US were planted with glyphosate-resistant seed in 2011.[39]

Weeds may be chemically controlled using glyphosate without harming the crop. After planting sugar beet seed, weeds emerge in fields and growers apply glyphosate to control them. Glyphosate is commonly used in field crops because it controls a broad spectrum of weed species[40] and has a low toxicity.[41] A study from the UK[42] suggests yields of genetically modified beet were greater than conventional, while another from the North Dakota State University extension service found lower yields.[43] The introduction of glyphosate-resistant sugar beets may contribute to the growing number of glyphosate-resistant weeds, so Monsanto has developed a program to encourage growers to use different herbicide modes of action to control their weeds.[44]

In 2008, the Center for Food Safety, the Sierra Club, the Organic Seed Alliance and High Mowing Seeds filed a lawsuit against USDA-APHIS regarding their decision to deregulate glyphosate-resistant sugar beets in 2005. The organizations expressed concerns regarding glyphosate-resistant sugar beets' ability to potentially cross-pollinate with conventional sugar beets.[45] U.S. District Judge Jeffrey S. White, US District Court for the Northern District of California, revoked the deregulation of glyphosate-resistant sugar beets and declared it unlawful for growers to plant glyphosate-resistant sugar beets in the spring of 2011.[45][46] Believing a sugar shortage would occur USDA-APHIS developed three options in the environmental assessment to address the concerns of environmentalists.[47] In 2011, a federal appeals court for the Northern district of California in San Francisco overturned the ruling.[38] In July 2012, after completing an environmental impact assessment and a plant pest risk assessment the USDA deregulated Monsanto's Roundup Ready sugar beets.[48]

Genome and genetics edit

The sugar beet genome shares a triplication event somewhere super-Caryophyllales and at or sub-Eudicots. It has been sequenced and two reference genome sequences have already been generated.[7] The genome size of the sugar beet is approximately 731 (714–758)[7] Megabases, and sugar beet DNA is packaged in 18 metacentric chromosomes (2n=2x=18).[49] All sugar beet centromeres are made up of a single satellite DNA family[50] and centromere-specific LTR retrotransposons.[51] More than 60% of sugar beet's DNA is repetitive, mostly distributed in a dispersed way along the chromosomes.[52][53][54][55]

Crop wild beet populations (B. vulgaris ssp. maritima) have been sequenced as well, allowing for identification of the resistance gene Rz2 in the wild progenitor.[56] Rz2 confers resistance to rhizomania, commonly known as the sugar beet root madness disease.

Breeding edit

Sugar beets have been bred for increased sugar content, from 8% to 18% in the 200 years up to 2013, resistance to viral and fungal diseases, increased taproot size, monogermy, and less bolting. Breeding has been eased by discovery of a cytoplasmic male sterility line – this has especially been useful in yield breeding.[7]

References edit

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  52. ^ Weber, Beatrice; Wenke, Torsten; Frömmel, Ulrike; et al. (1 February 2010). "The Ty1-copia families SALIRE and Cotzilla populating the Beta vulgaris genome show remarkable differences in abundance, chromosomal distribution, and age". Chromosome Research. 18 (2): 247–263. doi:10.1007/s10577-009-9104-4. ISSN 1573-6849. PMID 20039119. S2CID 24883110.
  53. ^ Wollrab, Cora; Heitkam, Tony; Holtgräwe, Daniela; et al. (2012). "Evolutionary reshuffling in the Errantivirus lineage Elbe within the Beta vulgaris genome". The Plant Journal. 72 (4): 636–651. doi:10.1111/j.1365-313X.2012.05107.x. hdl:11858/00-001M-0000-000E-F0B9-B. ISSN 1365-313X. PMID 22804913.
  54. ^ Heitkam, Tony; Schmidt, Thomas (2009). "BNR – a LINE family from Beta vulgaris– contains a RRM domain in open reading frame 1 and defines a L1 sub-clade present in diverse plant genomes". The Plant Journal. 59 (6): 872–882. doi:10.1111/j.1365-313X.2009.03923.x. ISSN 1365-313X. PMID 19473321.
  55. ^ Schwichtenberg, Katrin; Wenke, Torsten; Zakrzewski, Falk; et al. (2016). "Diversification, evolution and methylation of short interspersed nuclear element families in sugar beet and related Amaranthaceae species". The Plant Journal. 85 (2): 229–244. doi:10.1111/tpj.13103. ISSN 1365-313X. PMID 26676716.
  56. ^ Capistrano-Gossmann, Gina G.; Ries, D.; Holtgräwe, D.; et al. (6 June 2017). "Crop wild relative populations of Beta vulgaris allow direct mapping of agronomically important genes". Nature Communications. 8: 15708. Bibcode:2017NatCo...815708C. doi:10.1038/ncomms15708. PMC 5467160. PMID 28585529.

External links edit

  • How Beet Sugar is Made
  • Guardian (UK) article on how sugar beet can be used for fuel
  • Sugar beet culture in the northern Great Plains area hosted by the University of North Texas Government Documents Department
  • US court bans GM sugar beet: Cultivation to take place under controlled conditions? 13 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Sugar From Beets" Popular Science Monthly, March 1935
  • "Beet Sugar". JSTOR.

sugar, beet, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february, 2021. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sugar beet news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message A sugar beet is a plant whose root contains a high concentration of sucrose and which is grown commercially for sugar production In plant breeding it is known as the Altissima cultivar group of the common beet Beta vulgaris 1 Together with other beet cultivars such as beetroot and chard it belongs to the subspecies Beta vulgaris subsp vulgaris but classified as var saccharifera Its closest wild relative is the sea beet Beta vulgaris subsp maritima 2 Sugar beetSugar beet illustration of root leaf and flowering patternsSpeciesBeta vulgarisSubspeciesBeta vulgaris subsp vulgaris var saccharifera Cultivar groupAltissima GroupOriginSilesia mid 18th centurySugar beets are grown in climates that are too cold for sugarcane In 2020 Russia the United States Germany France and Turkey were the world s five largest sugar beet producers 3 In 2010 2011 Europe and North America except Arctic territories failed to supply the overall domestic demand for sugar and were all net importers of sugar 4 The US harvested 1 004 600 acres 406 547 ha of sugar beets in 2008 5 In 2009 sugar beets accounted for 20 of the world s sugar production 6 and nearly 30 by 2013 7 Sugarcane accounts for most of the rest of sugar produced globally Contents 1 Description 2 History of the sugar beet 2 1 Discovery of beet sugar 2 2 Development of the Sugar beet 2 3 History of the beet sugar industry 3 Culture 4 Production statistics 5 From sugar beet to white sugar 5 1 Sugar factory 5 2 Sugar refinery 6 Ethanol and alcohol 6 1 From molasses 6 2 From sugar beet 7 Other uses 7 1 Sugary syrup 7 2 Uridine 7 3 Alternative fuel 7 4 Cattle feed 7 5 Monosodium glutamate 8 Agriculture 8 1 Genetic modification 9 Genome and genetics 10 Breeding 11 References 12 External linksDescription editThe sugar beet has a conical white fleshy root a taproot with a flat crown The plant consists of the root and a rosette of leaves Sugar is formed by photosynthesis in the leaves and is then stored in the root The root of the beet contains 75 water about 20 7 sugar and 5 pulp 8 The exact sugar content can vary between 12 and 21 depending on the cultivar and growing conditions Sugar is the primary value of sugar beet as a cash crop The pulp insoluble in water and mainly composed of cellulose hemicellulose lignin and pectin is used in animal feed The byproducts of the sugar beet crop such as pulp and molasses add another 10 to the value of the harvest 6 Sugar beets grow exclusively in the temperate zone in contrast to sugarcane which grows exclusively in the tropical and subtropical zones The average weight of a sugar beet ranges between 0 5 and 1 kg 1 1 and 2 2 lb Sugar beet foliage has a rich brilliant green color and grows to a height of about 35 cm 14 in The leaves are numerous and broad and grow in a tuft from the crown of the beet which is usually level with or just above the ground surface 9 History of the sugar beet editDiscovery of beet sugar edit Main article Beta vulgaris nbsp A geneticist evaluates sugar beet plants nbsp French sugar beet mill in operation in the 1840sThe species beet consists of several cultivar groups The 16th century French scientist Olivier de Serres discovered a process for preparing sugar syrup from red beetroot He wrote The beet root when being boiled yields a juice similar to syrup of sugar which is beautiful to look at on account of its vermilion colour 10 1575 11 Because crystallized cane sugar was already available and had a better taste this process did not become popular Modern sugar beets date to the mid 18th century Silesia where Frederick the Great king of Prussia subsidized experiments to develop processes for sugar extraction 12 13 In 1747 Andreas Sigismund Marggraf professor of physics in the Academy of Science of Berlin isolated sugar from beetroots and found them at concentrations of 1 3 1 6 14 He also demonstrated that the sugar that could be extracted from beets was identical to that produced from cane 13 He found the best of these vegetable sources for sugar was the white beet 15 Despite Marggraf s success in isolating sugar from beets it did not lead to commercial sugar production Development of the Sugar beet edit Marggraf s student and successor Franz Karl Achard began plant breeding sugar beet in Kaulsdorf near Berlin in 1786 16 Achard started his plant breeding by evaluating 23 varieties of beet for sugar content 17 In the end he selected a local strain from Halberstadt in modern day Saxony Anhalt Germany Moritz Baron von Koppy and his son further selected white conical tubers from this strain 14 The selection was named weisse schlesische Zuckerrube meaning white Silesian sugar beet 16 In about 1800 this cultivar boasted about 5 6 sucrose by dry weight 18 It would go on to be the progenitor of all modern sugar beets 16 The plant breeding process has continued since then leading to a sucrose content of around 18 in modern varieties 7 History of the beet sugar industry edit Main article Beet sugar factory Franz Karl Achard opened the world s first beet sugar factory in 1801 at Kunern Silesia now Konary Poland 9 The idea to produce sugar from beet was soon introduced to France whence the European sugar beet industry rapidly expanded By 1840 about 5 of the world s sugar was derived from sugar beets and by 1880 this number had risen more than tenfold to over 50 12 In North America the first commercial production started in 1879 at a farm in Alvarado California 13 14 The sugar beet was introduced to Chile by German settlers around 1850 14 Culture edit nbsp A sugar beet farm in Switzerland nbsp Worldwide sugar beet production nbsp A beet harvesterThe sugar beet like sugarcane needs a particular soil and a proper climate for its successful cultivation The most important requirements are that the soil must contain a large supply of nutrients be rich in humus and be able to contain a great deal of moisture A certain amount of alkali is not necessarily detrimental as sugar beets are not especially susceptible to injury by some alkali The ground should be fairly level and well drained especially where irrigation is practiced 9 Generous crops can be grown in both sandy soil and heavy loams but the ideal soil is a sandy loam i e a mixture of organic matter clay and sand A subsoil of gravel or the presence of hardpan is not desirable as cultivation to a depth of from 12 to 15 inches 30 to 38 cm is necessary to produce the best results Climatic conditions temperature sunshine rainfall and winds have an important bearing upon the success of sugar beet agriculture A temperature ranging from 15 to 21 C 59 to 70 F during the growing months is most favorable In the absence of adequate irrigation 460 mm 18 inches of rainfall are necessary to raise an average crop High winds are harmful as they generally crust the land and prevent the young beets from coming through the ground The best results are obtained along the coast of southern California where warm sunny days succeeded by cool foggy nights seem to meet sugar beet s favored growth conditions Sunshine of long duration but not of great intensity is the most important factor in the successful cultivation of sugar beets Near the equator the shorter days and the greater heat of the sun sharply reduce the sugar content in the beet 9 In high elevation regions such as those of Idaho Colorado and Utah where the temperature is high during the daytime but where the nights are cool the quality of the sugar beet is excellent In Michigan the long summer days from the relatively high latitude the Lower Peninsula where production is concentrated lies between the 41st and 46th parallels North and the influence of the Great Lakes result in satisfactory climatic conditions for sugar beet culture Sebewaing Michigan lies in the Thumb region of Michigan both the region and state are major sugar beet producers Sebewaing is home to one of four Michigan Sugar Company factories The town sponsors an annual Michigan Sugar Festival 19 unreliable source To cultivate beets successfully the land must be properly prepared Deep ploughing is the first principle of beet culture It allows the roots to penetrate the subsoil without much obstruction thereby preventing the beet from growing out of the ground besides enabling it to extract considerable nourishment and moisture from the lower soil If the latter is too hard the roots will not penetrate it readily and as a result the plant will be pushed up and out of the earth during the process of growth A hard subsoil is impervious to water and prevents proper drainage It should not be too loose however as this allows the water to pass through more freely than is desirable Ideally the soil should be deep fairly fine and easily penetrable by the roots It should also be capable of retaining moisture and at the same time admit of a free circulation of air and good drainage Sugar beet crops exhaust the soil rapidly Crop rotation is recommended and necessary Normally beets are grown in the same ground every third year peas beans or grain being raised the other two years 9 In most temperate climates beets are planted in the spring and harvested in the autumn At the northern end of its range growing seasons as short as 100 days can produce commercially viable sugar beet crops In warmer climates such as in California s Imperial Valley sugar beets are a winter crop planted in the autumn and harvested in the spring In recent years Syngenta has developed the so called tropical sugar beet It allows the plant to grow in tropical and subtropical regions Beets are planted from a small seed 1 kg 2 2 lb of beet seed comprises 100 000 seeds and will plant over one hectare 2 5 acres of ground one pound or 0 45 kilograms will plant about one acre or 0 40 hectares Until the latter half of the 20th century sugar beet production was highly labor intensive as weed control was managed by densely planting the crop which then had to be manually thinned two or three times with a hoe during the growing season Harvesting also required many workers Although the roots could be lifted by a plough like device which could be pulled by a horse team the rest of the preparation was by hand One laborer grabbed the beets by their leaves knocked them together to shake free loose soil and then laid them in a row root to one side greens to the other A second worker equipped with a beet hook a short handled tool between a billhook and a sickle followed behind and would lift the beet and swiftly chop the crown and leaves from the root with a single action Working this way he would leave a row of beets that could be forked into the back of a cart Today mechanical sowing herbicide application for weed control and mechanical harvesting have displaced this reliance on manual farm work A root beater uses a series of blades to chop the leaf and crown which is high in nonsugar impurities from the root The beet harvester lifts the root and removes excess soil from the root in a single pass over the field A modern harvester is typically able to cover six rows at the same time The beets are dumped into trucks as the harvester rolls down the field and then delivered to the factory The conveyor then removes more soil If the beets are to be left for later delivery they are formed into clamps Straw bales are used to shield the beets from the weather Provided the clamp is well built with the right amount of ventilation the beets do not significantly deteriorate Beets that freeze and then defrost produce complex carbohydrates that cause severe production problems in the factory In the UK loads may be hand examined at the factory gate before being accepted In the US the fall harvest begins with the first hard frost which arrests photosynthesis and the further growth of the root Depending on the local climate it may be carried out over the course of a few weeks or be prolonged throughout the winter months The harvest and processing of the beet is referred to as the campaign reflecting the organization required to deliver the crop at a steady rate to processing factories that run 24 hours a day for the duration of the harvest and processing for the UK the campaign lasts about five months In the Netherlands this period is known as de bietencampagne a time to be careful when driving on local roads in the area while the beets are being grown because the naturally high clay content of the soil tends to cause slippery roads when soil falls from the trailers during transport Production statistics editTop ten sugar beet producers 2020 FAO 3 Rank Country Production million tonnes 1 nbsp Russia 33 92 nbsp United States 30 53 nbsp Germany 28 64 nbsp France 26 25 nbsp Turkey 23 06 nbsp Poland 14 27 nbsp Egypt 13 08 nbsp China 11 69 nbsp Ukraine 9 210 nbsp Netherlands 6 7Total World 252 9 nbsp Sugar beet output in 2009The world harvested 252 968 843 metric tons 249 000 000 long tons 278 900 000 short tons of sugar beets in 2020 The world s largest producer was Russia with a 33 915 086 metric tons 33 400 000 long tons 37 400 000 short tons harvest 3 The average yield of sugar beet crops worldwide was 58 2 tonnes per hectare The most productive sugar beet farms in the world in 2010 were in Chile with a nationwide average yield of 87 3 tonnes per hectare 20 Imperial Valley California farmers have achieved yields of about 160 tonnes per hectare and over 26 tonnes sugar per hectare Imperial Valley farms benefit from high intensities of incident sunlight and intensive use of irrigation and fertilizers 21 22 From sugar beet to white sugar edit nbsp A sugar beet farm in Belgium Beyond the field is the sugar factory Most sugar beet are used to create white sugar This is done in a beet sugar factory often abbreviated to sugar factory Nowadays these most of the time also act as a sugar refinery but historically the beet sugar factory produced raw sugar and the sugar refinery refined raw sugar to create white sugar Sugar factory edit Main article Beet sugar factory In the 1960s beet sugar processing was described as consisting of these steps 23 Harvesting and storage in a way that preserves the beet while they wait to be processed Washing and scrubbing to remove soil and debris Slicing the beet in small pieces called cossettes or chips Removing the sugar from the beet in an osmosis process resulting in raw juice and beet pulp 23 Nowadays most sugar factories then refine the raw juice themselves without moving it to a sugar refinery The beet pulp is processed on site to become cattle fodder Sugar refinery edit Main article Sugar refinery nbsp The Chelsea Sugar Refinery in New ZealandThe next steps to produce white sugar are not specific for producing sugar from sugar beet They also apply to producing white sugar from sugar cane As such they belong to the sugar refining process not to the beet sugar production process per se Purification the raw juice undergoes a chemical process to remove impurities and create thin juice 24 Evaporation the thin juice is concentrated by evaporation to make a thick juice roughly 60 sucrose by weight Crystallization by boiling under reduced pressure the sugar liquor is turned into crystals and remaining liquor 25 Centrifugation in a centrifuge the white sugar crystals are separated from the remaining sugar liquor 26 The remaining liquor is then boiled and centrifuged producing a lower grade of crystallised sugar which is redissolved to feed the white sugar pans and molasses 26 Further sugar can be recovered from the molasses eg by the Steffen Process Ethanol and alcohol editFrom molasses edit nbsp Tuzemak a sugar beet based alcohol from CzechiaThere are two obvious methods to produce alcohol ethanol from sugar beet The first method produces alcohol as a byproduct of manufacturing sugar It is about fermenting the sugar beet molasses that are left after the second centrifugation 27 This strongly resembles the manufacture of rum from sugar cane molasses In a number of countries notably the Czech Republic and Slovakia this analogy led to making a rum like distilled spirit called Tuzemak 28 On the Aland Islands a similar drink is made under the brand name Kobba Libre From sugar beet edit The second method to produce alcohol from sugar beet is to ferment the sugar beet themselves I e without attempting to produce sugar The idea to distill sugar from the beet came up soon after the first beet sugar factory was established 27 In 1852 1854 Champonnois devised a good system to distill alcohol from sugar beet 29 Within a few years a large sugar distilling industry was created in France 27 The current process to produce alcohol by fermenting and distilling sugar beet consists of these steps 30 Adding Starch milk Liquefaction and Saccharification Fermentation in fermentation vats Distillation Dehydration this results in Bioethanol Rectification Refining the end result is a highly pure alcoholLarge sugar beet distilleries remain limited to Europe In 2023 Tereos had 8 beet sugar distilleries located in France Czechia and Romania 31 In many European countries rectified spirit from sugar beet is used to make Liquor e g vodka Gin etc Other uses editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sugary syrup edit nbsp Traditional Dutch stroop and the bottled versionAn unrefined sugary syrup can be produced directly from sugar beet This thick dark syrup is produced by cooking shredded sugar beet for several hours then pressing the resulting mash and concentrating the juice produced until it has a consistency similar to that of honey No other ingredients are used In Germany particularly the Rhineland area and in the Netherlands this sugar beet syrup called Zuckerruben Sirup or Zapp in German or Suikerstroop in Dutch is used as a spread for sandwiches as well as for sweetening sauces cakes and desserts Dutch people generally top their pancakes with stroop Suikerstroop made according to the Dutch tradition is a Traditional Speciality Guaranteed under EU and UK law 32 Commercially if the syrup has a dextrose equivalency DE above 30 the product has to be hydrolyzed and converted to a high fructose syrup much like high fructose corn syrup or isoglucose syrup in the EU Uridine edit Uridine can be isolated from sugar beet Alternative fuel edit BP and Associated British Foods plan to use agricultural surpluses of sugar beet to produce biobutanol in East Anglia in the United Kingdom The feedstock to yield ratio for sugarbeet is 56 9 Therefore it takes 6 22 kg of sugar beet to produce 1 kg of ethanol approximately 1 27 L at room temperature In 2006 it was found that producing ethanol from sugar beet or cane became profitable when market prices for ethanol were close to 4 per gallon 33 Cattle feed edit In New Zealand sugar beet is widely grown and harvested as feed for dairy cattle It is regarded as superior to fodder beet because it has a lower water content resulting in better storage properties Both the beet bulb and the leaves with 25 protein are fed to cattle Although long considered toxic to cattle harvested beet bulbs can be fed to cattle if they are appropriately transitioned to their new diet Dairy cattle in New Zealand can thrive on just pasture and beets without silage or other supplementary feed The crop is also now grown in some parts of Australia as cattle feed 34 35 Monosodium glutamate edit Molasses can serve to produce monosodium glutamate MSG Agriculture edit nbsp Sugar beet farming using dam culture method Used in Russia Germany France Ukraine Turkey China Poland and sometimes Egypt Sugar beets are an important part of a crop rotation cycle Sugar beet plants are susceptible to Rhizomania root madness which turns the bulbous tap root into many small roots making the crop economically unprocessable Strict controls are enforced in European countries to prevent the spread but it is already present in some areas It is also susceptible to both the beet leaf curl virus which causes crinkling and stunting of the leaves and beet yellows virus Continual research looks for varieties with resistance as well as increased sugar yield Sugar beet breeding research in the United States is most prominently conducted at various USDA Agricultural Research Stations including one in Fort Collins Colorado headed by Linda Hanson and Leonard Panella one in Fargo North Dakota headed by John Wieland and one at Michigan State University in East Lansing Michigan headed by Rachel Naegele Other economically important members of the subfamily Chenopodioideae Beetroot Chard Mangelwurzel or fodder beetGenetic modification edit Main article Genetically modified sugar beet In the United States genetically modified sugar beets engineered for resistance to glyphosate a herbicide marketed as Roundup were developed by Monsanto as a genetically modified crop In 2005 the US Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service USDA APHIS deregulated glyphosate resistant sugar beets after it conducted an environmental assessment and determined glyphosate resistant sugar beets were highly unlikely to become a plant pest 36 37 Sugar from glyphosate resistant sugar beets has been approved for human and animal consumption in multiple countries but commercial production of biotech beets has been approved only in the United States and Canada Studies have concluded the sugar from glyphosate resistant sugar beets has the same nutritional value as sugar from conventional sugar beets 38 After deregulation in 2005 glyphosate resistant sugar beets were extensively adopted in the United States About 95 of sugar beet acres in the US were planted with glyphosate resistant seed in 2011 39 Weeds may be chemically controlled using glyphosate without harming the crop After planting sugar beet seed weeds emerge in fields and growers apply glyphosate to control them Glyphosate is commonly used in field crops because it controls a broad spectrum of weed species 40 and has a low toxicity 41 A study from the UK 42 suggests yields of genetically modified beet were greater than conventional while another from the North Dakota State University extension service found lower yields 43 The introduction of glyphosate resistant sugar beets may contribute to the growing number of glyphosate resistant weeds so Monsanto has developed a program to encourage growers to use different herbicide modes of action to control their weeds 44 In 2008 the Center for Food Safety the Sierra Club the Organic Seed Alliance and High Mowing Seeds filed a lawsuit against USDA APHIS regarding their decision to deregulate glyphosate resistant sugar beets in 2005 The organizations expressed concerns regarding glyphosate resistant sugar beets ability to potentially cross pollinate with conventional sugar beets 45 U S District Judge Jeffrey S White US District Court for the Northern District of California revoked the deregulation of glyphosate resistant sugar beets and declared it unlawful for growers to plant glyphosate resistant sugar beets in the spring of 2011 45 46 Believing a sugar shortage would occur USDA APHIS developed three options in the environmental assessment to address the concerns of environmentalists 47 In 2011 a federal appeals court for the Northern district of California in San Francisco overturned the ruling 38 In July 2012 after completing an environmental impact assessment and a plant pest risk assessment the USDA deregulated Monsanto s Roundup Ready sugar beets 48 Genome and genetics editThe sugar beet genome shares a triplication event somewhere super Caryophyllales and at or sub Eudicots It has been sequenced and two reference genome sequences have already been generated 7 The genome size of the sugar beet is approximately 731 714 758 7 Megabases and sugar beet DNA is packaged in 18 metacentric chromosomes 2n 2x 18 49 All sugar beet centromeres are made up of a single satellite DNA family 50 and centromere specific LTR retrotransposons 51 More than 60 of sugar beet s DNA is repetitive mostly distributed in a dispersed way along the chromosomes 52 53 54 55 Crop wild beet populations B vulgaris ssp maritima have been sequenced as well allowing for identification of the resistance gene Rz2 in the wild progenitor 56 Rz2 confers resistance to rhizomania commonly known as the sugar beet root madness disease Breeding editSugar beets have been bred for increased sugar content from 8 to 18 in the 200 years up to 2013 update resistance to viral and fungal diseases increased taproot size monogermy and less bolting Breeding has been eased by discovery of a cytoplasmic male sterility line this has especially been useful in yield breeding 7 References edit Sorting Beta names Multilingual Multiscript Plant Name Database 4 May 2013 Archived from the original on 4 May 2013 Beta Maritima The Origin of Beets Springer 2012 ISBN 978 1 4614 0841 3 The volume will be completely devoted to the sea beet that is the ancestor of all the cultivated beets The wild plant growing mainly on the shore of the Mediterranean Sea remains very important as source of useful traits for beet breeding a b c Crops and livestock products Food and Agriculture Organization Sugar World Markets and Trade PDF United States Department of Agriculture FAS Information 2011 NASS Statistics by Subject Crops amp Plants Field Crops Sugarbeets United States Department of Agriculture 2 October 2006 Archived from the original on 3 October 2006 a b Agribusiness Handbook Sugar beet white sugar PDF Food and Agriculture Organization United Nations 2009 a b c d e f Dohm Juliane C Minoche Andre E Holtgrawe Daniela et al 18 December 2013 The genome of the recently domesticated crop plant sugar beet Beta vulgaris Nature Nature Portfolio 505 7484 546 549 Bibcode 2014Natur 505 546D doi 10 1038 nature12817 hdl 10230 22493 ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 24352233 Agribusiness Handbooks vol 4 Sugar Beets White Sugar PDF 1999 Archived from the original PDF on 6 October 2014 a b c d e George Rolph 1873 Something about sugar its history growth manufacture and distribution San Francisco J J Newbegin Jules Helot 1912 Histoire Centennale du Sucre de Betterave OCLC 11941819 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help L histoire du sucre Klorane Botanical Foundation www kloranebotanical foundation in French Retrieved 2023 02 08 a b Hill G Langer R H M 1991 Agricultural plants Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 197 199 ISBN 978 0 521 40563 8 a b c Sugarbeet Archived 20 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine from a University of California Davis website a b c d Hanelt Peter Buttner R Mansfeld Rudolf Kilian Ruth 2001 Mansfeld s Encyclopedia of Agricultural and Horticultural Crops Springer pp 235 241 ISBN 978 3 540 41017 1 Experiences chimiques faites dans le dessein de tirer un veritable sucre de diverses plantes qui croissent dans nos contrees Chemical experiments made with the intention of extracting real sugar from diverse plants that grow in our lands Marggraf 1747 1749 pp 79 90 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b c Doering Emil 1896 Die Zuckerrube und ihr Anbau Eduard Trewent Breslau Supplement to the Chronicle of the Beet Sugar Industry 1897 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Birnbaum Eduard 1887 Der Zuckerrubenbau kurzgefasste Anleitung zum Anbau der Zuckerrube fur den praktischen Landwirth W G Korn Breslau De icing Highways and Roads Using Sugar Beet Juice Yahoo Archived from the original on 10 February 2013 Retrieved 2 November 2012 FAOSTAT Production Crops Sugar beet 2010 data Food and Agriculture Organization 2011 Archived from the original on 14 January 2013 Limb Re 2008 THE EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION OF AGRICULTURAL R amp D OUTPUT IN THE UK BEET SUGAR INDUSTRY PDF Proc South African Sugar Technology Association 81 107 115 Attention to detail critical in meeting beet yield targets Farmers Guardian June 2010 a b An economic study of the beet sugar industry in Montana PDF Montana State University 1 March 1969 Retrieved 20 January 2023 Koyikkal Srikumar 8 April 2013 Chemical Process Technology and Simulation PHI Learning Pvt Ltd ISBN 9788120347090 Dowse Peter Refining sugar cane sugarnutritionresource org Retrieved 3 January 2023 a b Eric Twitty August 2003 Silver Wedge The Sugar Beet Industry in Fort Collins PDF SWCA Environmental Consultants Retrieved 9 August 2020 a b c Levi Nathaniel 1870 The Sugar Beet Its Adaptability for Cultivation in the Colony George Robertson Melbourne p 18 Czechs and Their Billion Dollar Beets Tres Bohemes 2017 02 09 Retrieved 2023 03 17 d Aligny Henry Ferdinand Quarre 1869 The Manufacture of Beet Sugar and Alcohol and the Cultivation of Sugar beet Government printing office Washington pp 40 59 Alcohol and ethanol Tereos Retrieved 19 March 2023 Raw Material Sugar Beet Tereos Retrieved 19 March 2023 European Commission 2018 sfn error no target CITEREFEuropean Commission2018 help Cole Gustafson 2010 Economics of Sugar Beet and Cane Biofuel Energy North Dakota State University Retrieved 2023 02 08 Grower lauds sugar beet wonder fuel Stuff 24 June 2014 Retrieved 25 September 2021 Group Rural News Fodder sugar beets dream feed if grown right ruralnewsgroup co nz Retrieved 25 September 2021 Monsanto Roundup Ready Sugarbeets Roundup Ready Sugar Beet Case Timeline APHIS 7 September 2010 Archived from the original on 17 October 2010 a b United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit No 10 17719 D C No 3 10 cv 04038 JSW PDF 25 February 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 16 October 2013 Retrieved 28 August 2012 Brief 43 2011 Executive Summary Global Status of Commercialized Biotech GM Crops 2011 ISAAA Archived from the original on 10 February 2012 Michigan Sugar Company 2010 Growers Guide for Producing Quality Sugarbeets Stephen O Duke amp Stephen B Powles 2008 Glyphosate a once in a century herbicide Mini review Pest Management Science Pest Manag Sci 64 319 325 May MJ et al 2005 Management of genetically modified herbicide tolerant sugar beet for spring and autumn environmental benefit Proc Biol Sci 27 1559 111 119 doi 10 1098 rspb 2004 2948 PMC 1634958 PMID 15695200 Mike Abrams 6 February 2009 Roundup Ready Crops Prove to be a Hit in the USA Farmers Weekly Archived from the original on 24 November 2011 Press Release Monsanto Outlines New Weed Management Platform Under the Roundup Ready PLUS Brand monsanto 19 October 2010 Archived from the original on 22 June 2012 a b USDA APHIS 4 February 2011 Roundup Ready Sugar Beet Case Timeline Archived from the original on 1 July 2013 USDA APHIS 29 January 2009 Environmental Compliance Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 USDA APHIS USDA Prepares Draft Environmental Assessment on Regulatory Options for Roundup Ready Sugar Beets Archived from the original on 6 November 2010 Roundup Ready Sugar Beet News USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service 7 August 2012 Archived from the original on 13 October 2010 Retrieved 28 July 2012 Paesold Susanne Borchardt Dietrich Schmidt Thomas Dechyeva Daryna 7 September 2012 A sugar beet Beta vulgarisL reference FISH karyotype for chromosome and chromosome arm identification integration of genetic linkage groups and analysis of major repeat family distribution The Plant Journal 72 4 600 611 doi 10 1111 j 1365 313x 2012 05102 x ISSN 0960 7412 PMID 22775355 Zakrzewski Falk Weber Beatrice Schmidt Thomas 2013 A Molecular Cytogenetic Analysis of the Structure Evolution and Epigenetic Modifications of Major DNA Sequences in Centromeres of Beta Species Plant Centromere Biology John Wiley amp Sons Ltd pp 39 55 doi 10 1002 9781118525715 ch4 ISBN 9781118525715 Weber Beatrice Heitkam Tony Holtgrawe Daniela et al 1 March 2013 Highly diverse chromoviruses of Beta vulgaris are classified by chromodomains and chromosomal integration Mobile DNA 4 1 8 doi 10 1186 1759 8753 4 8 ISSN 1759 8753 PMC 3605345 PMID 23448600 Weber Beatrice Wenke Torsten Frommel Ulrike et al 1 February 2010 The Ty1 copia families SALIRE and Cotzilla populating the Beta vulgaris genome show remarkable differences in abundance chromosomal distribution and age Chromosome Research 18 2 247 263 doi 10 1007 s10577 009 9104 4 ISSN 1573 6849 PMID 20039119 S2CID 24883110 Wollrab Cora Heitkam Tony Holtgrawe Daniela et al 2012 Evolutionary reshuffling in the Errantivirus lineage Elbe within the Beta vulgaris genome The Plant Journal 72 4 636 651 doi 10 1111 j 1365 313X 2012 05107 x hdl 11858 00 001M 0000 000E F0B9 B ISSN 1365 313X PMID 22804913 Heitkam Tony Schmidt Thomas 2009 BNR a LINE family from Beta vulgaris contains a RRM domain in open reading frame 1 and defines a L1 sub clade present in diverse plant genomes The Plant Journal 59 6 872 882 doi 10 1111 j 1365 313X 2009 03923 x ISSN 1365 313X PMID 19473321 Schwichtenberg Katrin Wenke Torsten Zakrzewski Falk et al 2016 Diversification evolution and methylation of short interspersed nuclear element families in sugar beet and related Amaranthaceae species The Plant Journal 85 2 229 244 doi 10 1111 tpj 13103 ISSN 1365 313X PMID 26676716 Capistrano Gossmann Gina G Ries D Holtgrawe D et al 6 June 2017 Crop wild relative populations of Beta vulgaris allow direct mapping of agronomically important genes Nature Communications 8 15708 Bibcode 2017NatCo 815708C doi 10 1038 ncomms15708 PMC 5467160 PMID 28585529 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sugar beets nbsp Look up sugar beet in Wiktionary the free dictionary How Beet Sugar is Made Guardian UK article on how sugar beet can be used for fuel Sugar beet culture in the northern Great Plains area hosted by the University of North Texas Government Documents Department US court bans GM sugar beet Cultivation to take place under controlled conditions Archived 13 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Sugar From Beets Popular Science Monthly March 1935 Beet Sugar JSTOR Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sugar beet amp oldid 1200099292, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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