Specialty Produce

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Specialty Produce Specialty Produce Fruit • Asian Pear • Date (fresh) • Loquat • Rhubarb • Banana Leaves • Feijoa • Lychee Nut • Sapote (Mamey) • Banana (Burro) • Figs (fresh) • Mango • Sapote (White) • Banana • Gooseberries • Mangosteen • Seville (Orange) (Manzano) • Guava • Papaya • Starfruit • Banana (Red) • Jujube • Passion Fruit • Sugar Cane • Blood Orange • Juniperberries • Pepino Melon • Tamarillo • Cactus Pear • Key lime • Persimmon • Tamarind • Champagne • Kiwano Melon • Pineapple (Baby) • Ugli Fruit Grape • Kumquat • Plantain • Cherimoya • Lady Apple • Pomegranate • Clementine • Limequat • Quince • Crab Apple Herbs • Arrugola • Dill • Mint • Savory • Basil • Epazote • Oregano • Sorrel • Bay Leaves • Garlic Chives • Purslane • Tarragon • Chives • Italian Parsley • Rosemary • Thyme • Cilantro • Marjoram • Sage Asian • Arrow Root • Ginger Root • Long Bean • Bittermelon • Gobo Root • Moqua • Bok Choy (Baby) • Japanese Cucumber • Opo Squash • Chinese Broccoli • Japanese Eggplant • Snow Pea Shoots • Chinese Eggplant • Japanese Pumpkin • Taro Root • Choy Sum • Lemon Grass • Waterchestnuts • Daikon • Lilly Root • Yu Choy Sum • Daikon Sprout Combs Produce | 915 South Harwood Street, Dallas, TX 75201 | (800) 466-6086 | www.combsproduce.com Specialty Produce Vegetables BEANS AND PEAS PEPPERS LETTUCE & BABY SQUASH Beans Bell Peppers: Holland ASSORTED GREENS • Acorn • Dragon Tongue Bean Bell Peppers, Chile • Belgian Endive • Green Pattypan Peppers (dried): • Fava Bean • Butterhead Lettuce • Scallopini • French Bean • Ancho • Dandelion Greens • Squash Blossoms • Romano Bean • Cascabel • Frisee • Sunburst • Sea Bean • Chipotle • Lollo Rosso • Zucchini (Green and Gold) • Vanilla Bean • De Arbol • Mache • Wax Beans • Guajillo • Mesclun MISC. VEGETABLES • Habanero • Miner’s Lettuce Peas • Asparagus • New Mexico (Red) • MizunaOakleaf • English Peas • Black Radish • Pasilla • Radicchio • Snow Pea • Cactus Leaves • Piquin • Red Mustard • Sugar Snap Pea® • Calabaza Chile Peppers (fresh): • Romaine • Cardoni • Spinach (Baby) MUSHROOMS • Anaheim (Green and Red) • Celery Root • Banana Pepper • Tango • Chard (Red) • Chanterelle • Cherry Pepper • Tat Soi • Chayote Squash • Chanterelle (Yellow Foot) • Fresno • Treviso (Radicchio) • Cucumber (Hothouse) • Crimini • Habanero (fresh) • Upland Cress • Fennel • Enoki • Hungarian Wax Pepper • Fiddlehead Fern • Lobster • Jalapeno BABY VEGETABLES • Horseradish Root • Matsutake • Pasilla • Artichoke • Jicama • Morel • Serrano • Eggplant • Kohlrabi • Oyster • Thai • Leek • Malanga • Porcini • Yellow Hot • Radish • Okra • Portobello • Round and Japanese • Olives • Shitake POTATOES • Eggplant • Rapini • Woodear • Boniato • Turnip • Salsify • Beets • Shallot TOMATOES • Fingerling • Purple • Carrot (Baby and White) • Sunchoke • Beefstake • Yellow Finnish • Caulifl ower • Tomatillo • Belgian • Yukon Gold • Corn • White Eggplant • Currant • Yuca Root • Roma ONIONS • Sundried • Teardrop • Cippolini • Vine • Maui • Pearl Combs Produce | 915 South Harwood Street, Dallas, TX 75201 | (800) 466-6086 | www.combsproduce.com.
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    bioRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.04.05.438488; this version posted April 6, 2021. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under aCC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license. 1 Brassica rapa domestication: untangling wild and feral forms and convergence of crop morphotypes Alex C. McAlvay, Aaron P. Ragsdale, Makenzie E. Mabry, Xinshuai Qi, Kevin A. Bird, Pablo Velasco, Hong An, J. Chris Pires, Eve Emshwiller Abstract The study of domestication contributes to our knowledge of evolution and crop genetic resources. Human selection has shaped wild Brassica rapa into diverse turnip, leafy, and oilseed crops. Despite its worldwide economic importance and potential as a model for understanding diversification under domestication, insights into the number of domestication events and initial crop(s) domesticated in B. rapa have been limited due to a lack of clarity about the wild or feral status of conspecific non-crop relatives. To address this gap and reconstruct the domestication history of B. rapa, we analyzed 68,468 genotyping-by-sequencing-derived SNPs for 416 samples in the largest diversity panel of domesticated and weedy B. rapa to date. To further understand the center of origin, we modeled the potential range of wild B. rapa during the mid-Holocene. Our analyses of genetic diversity across B. rapa morphotypes suggest that non-crop samples from the Caucasus, Siberia, and Italy may be truly wild, while those occurring in the Americas and much of Europe are feral.
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