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DBpedia 2015-10

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Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { ?s ?p "Groups of cultivars of Brassica oleracea Mabberley (q.v.) has these groups: Napobrassica Group / Pabularia Group / Acephala Group / Alboglabra Group / Botrytis Group / Capitata Group / Gemmifera Group / Gongylodes Group / Italica Group / Tronchuda Group / Chinensis Group / Japonica Group / Pekinensis Group / Perviridis Group / Rapifera GroupRoyal Botanic Gardens Kew has eight groups: Acephala Group (kale, borecole, collards) / Alboglabra Group (Chinese kale, Chinese broccoli, gai laan, kai lan) / Botrytis Group (broccoli, cauliflower, broccoflower, calabrese) / Capitata Group (cabbage, savoy cabbage, red cabbage) / Gemmifera Group (sprouts, Brussels sprouts) / Gongylodes Group (kohlrabi, knol-kohl) / Italica Group (purple sprouting, sprouting broccoli) / Tronchuda Group (Portuguese cabbage, seakale cabbage)The Acephala group of cultivars or variety for the species Brassica oleracea includes: kale, or borecole, or colewort curly kale American English collard greens, or collard U.K. English spring greens decorative kale, ornamental kale, flowering kale, flowering cabbage, or ornamental cabbage giant Jersey cabbage, long jack, walking-stick cabbage, cow cabbage, Jérriais lé grand chour à vaque [i.e., big cabbage for cows], Jérriais lé chour [i.e., cabbage], tree cabbage, or Jersey kale, or Brassica oleracea longata The long woody stems are used for walking-sticks and the foliage for cow-fodder. Scotch kaleThe Acephala means "no head" as the plants have leaves with no central head; the opposite arrangement of white cabbage, or Savoy cabbage.Each cultivar has a different genome owing to mutation, evolution, the ecological niche, and intentional plant-breeding by man.Mabberley (1997, p. 120) has the Acephala group in three sub-groups: kale, borecole, and collards."@en }

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