旺旺首页 > 英语 > VOA美国之音 > 特别英语慢速英语 > AGRICULTURE REPORT > Legumes: Good for People and Soil
更新时间:2006/2/21
 » Download Audio

I'm Steve Ember with the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.

Many different kinds of plants are part of the leguminosae group. They are called legumes. These plants can produce their own nitrogen. Beans are legumes. Peanuts are legumes. Alfalfa is a legume. There are also many different kinds of trees that are legumes.

As a food, beans are high in protein. Most beans also contain a lot of nutrients such as calcium, iron, phosphorus and niacin. Some beans contain amino acids and lysine.

weaver agriculture
The leaves of bean plants and other legumes also are high in nutrients. They are often fed to farm animals. Some farmers grow legumes especially for their animals. Cows, goats and other animals are permitted to eat the leaves on the plants in the fields.

Many farmers around the world know the value of growing legumes along with their main crops, or between harvests. The legumes replace nitrogen used by crops. They also provide a cover for the soil to help protect it from heavy rains and strong winds.

The roots of the legume plants hold the soil in place. This keeps the soil from being blown away by the wind or washed away by rain. The roots also loosen the soil. This lets the rain reach deep into the ground.

Legumes produce nitrogen through a process involving bacteria in the soil and nitrogen in the air. The bacteria form small growths on the plant roots. These growths are called nodules. They capture the atmospheric nitrogen that has entered the soil.

The nodules change the nitrogen into ammonia, a form of nitrogen that plants can use. The process is called nitrogen fixation. The bacteria needed for the process, rhizobia or frankia, are found in most soils. But if they are not present in the soil in a field, they can be "painted" on the legume seeds before the seeds are put in the ground. A local agriculture agent can show how to do this.

When planted next to fields, legume trees will add nitrogen to the soil. They provide shade and protect young crop plants from the heat of the sun. They provide firewood. And their wood can be used as building material. Some legume trees also provide medicines and chemicals for coloring cloth.

This VOA Special English Agriculture Report was written by Bob Bowen. Read and listen to our reports at voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Steve Ember.

相关主题链接:
Low-Fat Diets Alone Do Not Reduce Health Risks
Infertility in the Developing World 发展中国家的不孕现象
Television Dramas Help Save Lives 电视艺人为艾滋病患者献爱心
Coming Face-to-Face With the History of Slavery in New York
Media Group Details Attacks on the World Press in 2005
Mark Twain: One of America's Best Known and Best Loved Writers
Trying to Contain the Spread of Bird Flu
Figure Skating: Now It Is Little Sister Emily's Turn on Olympic Ice
Tools of the Trade: The Federal Reserve and the Money Supply
President Taft Breaks From Teddy Roosevelt -- His Closest Friend
Advanced Placement Programs Grow in U.S. High Schools
Styrofoam Stonehenge: A Full-Size Copy in a Search for Long-Lost Answers