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  • In honor of Valentine’s Day this weekend, I’m going to talk about the most popular

  • flower for the holiday: roses.

  • Roses have been around much longer than humans, for millions of years. Fossils of roseaceous

  • species have been found in North America, Europe, Asia and Africa. The earliest are

  • primarily from the Eocene period, which spanned 56 to 33.9 million years ago. This was in

  • the early part of the Cenozic era, a span also known as the Age of Mammals. These rose-like

  • species eventually evolved into the wild roses we see today.

  • Wild roses, however, probably don’t look like what you think of as roses. Roses are

  • in the family Rosaceae, and naturally have only 5 petals, like this one. The rose family

  • also includes important food crops, like apples, pears and cherries. The cut roses people give

  • by the dozens are cultivated roses, that have been bred over time to have more petals and

  • grow differently than their wild counterparts.

  • The first cultivated roses were grown around 5,000 years ago, possibly in China. Cultivated

  • roses were created through the accidental or purposeful cross-breeding of wild roses,

  • to create new varieties with desirable characteristics. This might include petal color, stem length,

  • smell or even when they flower. Today there are literally thousands of varieties of rose,

  • including ones that are intended to be grown in gardens, and ones intended for mass production

  • on cut flower farms.

  • Roses are the most popular cut flower in the United States, outpacing carnations by more

  • than double. In 2005, the US imported 1.3 billion stems of roses and produced almost

  • 99 million domestically. That makes 1.4 billion rose stems purchased in just one year. We

  • are, it would appear, enamored with roses.

  • Most of the United Statescut flowers come from Central and South America, primarily

  • Colombia. Holland, as you might expect, is the largest producer of cut flowers in the

  • world, but due to distance, they only contribute a small percentage of US imports. Ecuador

  • also contributes a large portion of US imports, especially roses.

  • Roses are grown in plastic greenhouses, where they can be protected from the elements. Growing

  • roses is a delicate process, and no farm wants to lose valuable blossoms to a rough storm.

  • Pesticides and herbicides are used in the growing process, some of them illegal in the

  • US, in the case of non-domestic flowers. An example in roses is the use of fungicides

  • to prevent botrytis, a fungus that ruins flower petals. Flowers might literally be dipped

  • in fungicide before leaving the growers. Something to keep in mind the next time you buy a bouquet.

  • As you might guess, Valentine’s Day is the busiest day of the year for florists. At flower

  • farms, growers will cap flower buds starting in December and January, to stop them from

  • blooming until theyre needed. One third of the year’s cut flower sales happen at

  • Valentine’s Day.

  • All right, hopefully you now know a little bit more about the flowers you might be giving

  • or receiving this weekend! I got a lot of the information for this video from the book

  • Flower Confidential by Amy Stewart, which I highly recommend if you’d like more information

  • about the cut flower industry.

  • Thanks so much for watching, and don’t forget to like and subscribe to see more botany content!

  • See you next time.

In honor of Valentine’s Day this weekend, I’m going to talk about the most popular

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