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  2. Wheatgrass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheatgrass

    Wheatgrass is the freshly sprouted first leaves of the common wheat plant (Triticum aestivum), used as a food, drink, or dietary supplement. Wheatgrass is served freeze dried or fresh, and so it differs from wheat malt, which is convectively dried. Wheatgrass is allowed to grow longer and taller than wheat malt.

  3. Ann Wigmore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Wigmore

    Ann Wigmore (March 4, 1909 – February 16, 1994) was a Lithuanian–American holistic health practitioner, naturopath and raw food advocate.. Influenced by the 'back to nature' theories of Maximilian Bircher-Benner, she maintained that plants concentrated more solar energy ('Vital Force') than animals, and that wheatgrass could detoxify the body.

  4. Agropyron cristatum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agropyron_cristatum

    Agropyron cristatum, the crested wheat grass, crested wheatgrass, fairway crested wheat grass, is a species in the family Poaceae. This plant is often used as forage and erosion control. It is well known as a widespread introduced species on the prairies of the United States and Canada .

  5. Agropyron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agropyron

    Agropyron cristatum - Crested wheatgrass - Eurasia + North Africa from Spain + Morocco to Korea + Khabarovsk; naturalized in western + central North America (United States, Canada, northern Mexico) Agropyron dasyanthum - Ukraine; Agropyron desertorum - Desert Wheatgrass - from Crimea + Caucasus to Mongolia + Siberia; Agropyron deweyi - Turkey

  6. Arthrospira - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthrospira

    The common name, spirulina, refers to the dried biomass of Arthrospira platensis, [3] a type of Cyanobacteria, which are oxygenic photosynthetic bacteria.These photosynthetic organisms were first considered to be algae, a very large and diverse group of eukaryotic organisms, until 1962 when they were reclassified as prokaryotes and named Cyanobacteria. [4]

  7. Spirulina (dietary supplement) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spirulina_(dietary_supplement)

    Spirulina is the dried biomass of cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) that can be consumed by humans and animals. The three species are Arthrospira platensis , A. fusiformis , and A. maxima . Cultivated worldwide, Arthrospira is used as a dietary supplement or whole food . [ 1 ]