Overall composition and macronutrient structure
Chickpea appears as a dense, carbohydrate-led legume with a substantial protein fraction and a smaller fat component. The overall profile suggests structural complexity rather than dominance by sugars or lipids. These figures establish the main nutritional architecture before moving into specific nutrient classes.
The largest share of the chickpea profile is associated with carbohydrates, especially the more structural fractions.
Protein is not incidental in the profile and contributes materially to the identity of the food.
Lipids are present but occupy a smaller share of the total composition than carbohydrate or protein.
The combined signal is coherent and stable rather than centered on a single extreme nutrient feature.
Place proximate_composition.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This figure provides the broadest view of chickpea composition by separating the major components of the food. It functions as the structural baseline for interpreting the rest of the dashboard.
Structural interpretation
The proximate composition view defines the main proportions of the chickpea matrix. It shows that the food is organized around a large carbohydrate base, reinforced by a notable protein fraction and a smaller lipid share.
This overall structure is consistent with chickpea functioning as a staple legume: substantial, compositionally dense, and suitable for use as both a protein source and a structured carbohydrate source.
Place roasted-chickpea2.jpg in the same folder as this HTML file.
Place macro_donut.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
The macronutrient donut condenses the broad macro balance into a single view, highlighting the relative dominance of carbohydrate, the meaningful contribution of protein, and the smaller role of fat.
Place fingerprint_heatmap.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
The heatmap presents the broader nutrient pattern of chickpea as a single visual fingerprint, showing which parts of the profile are relatively stronger or weaker across the measured variables.
Geographic Distribution
Place chickpea-yield.svg in the same folder as this HTML file.
This figure shows the global distribution of chickpea production, highlighting the major producing regions and the overall geographic pattern of cultivation. China, Sudan, Egypt, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Moldova, Jordan, and Israel all produce over 2.5 tonnes per hectar of chickpeas in 2024. Jordan produced the most per hectare with 11.89 tonnes per hectare.
Geographic Distribution Profile Interpretation
Both the map and the line graph show that chickpea production is globally distributed rather than being concentrated in a single region. Although, there are certain countries and regions with much higher production of chickpeas.
The overall pattern is one of broad cultivation across multiple continents and climates. This suggests that chickpea is a versatile crop that can be grown in a variety of conditions, contributing to its status as a staple legume in many parts of the world.
Place chickpea-yield.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This figure shows the top four chickpea-producing countries since 1961, Italy, Peru, United States, and India, and their production trends from 1961 to 2024, highlighting the growth patterns and relative contributions of each country to global production of chickpeas.
Amino-acid pattern and protein character
Total protein explains only part of the chickpea protein story. The amino-acid figures add shape to that number by showing where the profile is broad, where it is concentrated, and how the internal composition of the protein fraction is distributed across individual amino acids.
Protein profile interpretation
The amino-acid plots show that chickpea protein is not compositionally flat. Instead, it has a structured pattern with clear peaks and smaller components. This gives the protein fraction a distinct internal signature rather than appearing as an undifferentiated total value.
Reading the profile as a pattern is more informative than reading it as a single quantity, because it reveals how the protein component is assembled within the whole food.
Place roasted-chickpea.jpg in the same folder as this HTML file.
Place amino_acid_profile.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This figure shows the relative abundance of the individual amino acids and identifies the most prominent and least prominent contributors within the chickpea protein profile.
Place amino_acid_radar.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
The radar view emphasizes overall profile geometry and is useful for assessing the breadth and balance of the amino-acid pattern at a glance.
Place amino_flower_plot.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
The flower plot expresses the amino-acid distribution as a visual shape, making the internal structure of the protein profile easier to compare across the components.
Carbohydrate structure and distribution
The carbohydrate fraction of chickpea is not a single homogeneous category. The figures in this section separate starch, fiber, and smaller carbohydrate fractions to show how the carbohydrate signal is assembled and why chickpea behaves as a structured carbohydrate source rather than a sugar-led one.
Place carbohydrate_profile.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This is the clearest detailed view of the carbohydrate distribution within chickpea, separating the major fractions and showing which components dominate the profile.
Carbohydrate interpretation
The carbohydrate profile indicates that chickpea is dominated by structured fractions rather than by a simple sugar signal. This explains why its composition is better described in terms of starch and matrix-building carbohydrates.
The result is a profile consistent with a legume used for body, texture, and sustained nutritional contribution rather than sweetness or rapidly absorbed carbohydrate alone.
Place chickpea_seed.jpg in the same folder as this HTML file.
Lipid composition and class distribution
Although chickpea is not dominated by fat, its lipid fraction still has internal structure. The plots in this section distinguish between lipid classes and show how the small total fat share is divided across the underlying fatty-acid groups.
Lipid interpretation
The lipid profile adds nuance to the broad composition view. Rather than treating fat as a single total value, these figures show how that fraction is internally partitioned and whether the signal is concentrated in unsaturated, saturated, or mixed classes.
This section therefore contributes compositional detail even though the absolute fat share is modest within the whole food.
Place fat_rose_chart.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
The rose chart turns the lipid pattern into a radial form that emphasizes relative prominence across the fat classes.
Mineral pattern within the broader fingerprint
The mineral plots add finer-resolution detail to the chickpea profile. They show whether the mineral signal is spread across many components or concentrated more heavily in a smaller subset, contributing an additional layer to the whole-food picture.
Place mineral_profile.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This figure provides the main detailed view of the mineral distribution measured in chickpea.
Place mineral_bubble_strip.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
The bubble-strip format emphasizes relative magnitude and makes the mineral distribution easy to scan visually.
Integrated profile across the full nutrient space
Not all of the chickpea signal is best understood through isolated nutrient classes. Some figures summarize the full pattern directly and make it possible to interpret chickpea as a single integrated food profile rather than a list of parts.
Place chickpea_signature_skyline.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
The skyline view condenses the full profile into an overall silhouette, making the global shape of the chickpea signature easy to recognize.
Integrated interpretation
Summary figures are useful because they synthesize the information from the earlier sections into a single coherent shape. Instead of requiring separate interpretation of protein, carbohydrate, lipid, and mineral plots, they show the collective structure of the food in one view.
In this dataset, chickpea retains a recognizable signature even when many variables are combined, indicating that its overall profile is distinct rather than diffuse.
Place chickpea.jpg in the same folder as this HTML file.
Relative position across the main composition measures
These comparisons show where chickpea lands on total carbohydrate, protein, total fat, and fiber relative to the other sampled foods.
Position of chickpea among the other samples
The figures are interpreted here as targeted comparison plots. They are shown at larger size to make the cross-sample structure easier to read and to highlight where chickpea sits relative to the rest of the legume set.
Place chickpea_macro_spotlight.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This figure compares chickpea with the other legumes across the primary macronutrient axes and clarifies its relative balance of carbohydrate, protein, and fat.
Place chickpea_similarity_constellation.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This constellation-style view maps overall similarity and distance among the foods in the dataset, showing which samples cluster nearer to chickpea and which are more distinct.
Place chickpea_vs_animal_products_radar.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This radar plot compares chickpea with animal-product profiles and shows where the chickpea nutrient pattern overlaps with, or departs from, that category-level signature.
Place chickpea_vs_composite_dish_radar.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This figure places chickpea beside composite dishes, making it easier to see how a single whole-food legume compares with more mixed culinary profiles.
Place chickpea_vs_fruits_radar.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This comparison highlights the contrast between chickpea and fruit-like nutrient geometry, especially the difference between a structured legume profile and a lighter plant-food profile.
Place chickpea_vs_grains_radar.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This radar view compares chickpea with grains and helps distinguish where the legume pattern converges with staple carbohydrate foods and where it remains distinct because of protein and fiber structure.
Place chickpea_vs_vegetables_radar.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This final radar comparison shows how chickpea relates to vegetables and rounds out the category-level view of where the chickpea signature sits across broader food groups.
Place chickpea_vs_animal_products_top40_heatmap.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This heatmap compares chickpea with animal products across the most prominent variables and highlights the dimensions where the two profiles differ most clearly.
Place chickpea_vs_composite_dish_top40_heatmap.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This figure shows how chickpea aligns with and diverges from composite dishes across the top nutrient signals in a compact matrix view.
Place chickpea_vs_fruits_top40_heatmap.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This heatmap emphasizes the variables that distinguish chickpea from fruits and makes the category-level contrast easier to read at a glance.
Place chickpea_vs_grains_top40_heatmap.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This comparison heatmap shows where chickpea overlaps with grains and where its protein- and fiber-linked features remain distinct.
Place chickpea_vs_vegetables_top40_heatmap.png in the same folder as this HTML file.
This final heatmap compares chickpea with vegetables and completes the category-based matrix view across the broader food groups.
Summary of the chickpea profile
Across the full dashboard, chickpea is characterized by a strong carbohydrate base, a meaningful protein fraction, modest fat, and a stable whole-food signature. The profile is structured rather than diffuse, and the comparison plots show that chickpea occupies a distinct position among the other legumes.
Macronutrient identity
Chickpea is primarily carbohydrate-led, with protein contributing substantially and fat remaining secondary.
Internal composition
The nutrient classes are not uniform totals; each shows an internal structure that contributes to the overall signature.
Comparative position
Relative to the other legumes, chickpea remains compositionally recognizable across both macro and amino-acid comparisons.