Sweet potato

The sweet potato plant grows as a flowering vine with a large tuberous root. The root varies in color, ranging from white to orange to red to purple. Likely domesticated in South America, ancient Polynesians distributed it across the Pacific.

Because squash does not flower if it gets more than 11 hours of sunlight, at relatively high latitudes it rarely flowers during the summer. The flowers stay open only for a few hours, in the morning, before closing and then withering.

Later in the Fourth World, it spread further afield. As the globe warmed and the Fifth World dawned, people spread the tropics-adapted tuber well into polar regions. Because the tuber can grow well in many different kinds of soil, and adapts to extreme weather, it became a popular staple during the rapid climatic shifts around the time of collapse. It now flourishes all around the world.

#Human relations

People of the Fifth World enjoy the sweet potato tuber cooked in a wide variety of different ways: roasted, mashed, fried, and often mixed with a sweetener (such as honey) for a dessert. People also enjoy the young leaves and shoots as a nutritious vegetable.

People in South America often use red sweet potatoes and lime juice to dye cloth.

#Sweet Potato People

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