Search Results for: Mushrooms of the genus agaricus preserved but unsuitable for immediate consumption
or not,in packings of >3kg 340,644.65 0904: pepper of the genus piper, capiscum or pimenta, dried, crushed or ground 729,907.73 090412: pepper, crushed or ground 43,078.08 09041200: pepper, crushed or ground 43,078.08 090421: fruits of the genus capsicum ...,: dried or neither crushed or ground, wrapped
/canned up 658,231.81 09042110: fruits of the genus capsicum ...,: dried or neither crushed or ground, wrapped/canned up 448,773.84 09042190: fruits of the genus capsicum...,: dried or neither crushed or ground, excl.wrapped/canne 209,457.96 090422: fruits of the genus capsicum ...,: crushed or ground...
http://epb.portal.gov.bd/sites/default/files/files/epb.portal.gov.bd/epb_export_data/e0a932f7_9968_41ee_9e03_e5e5aa7ec29c/f23c9efe1ee07b8121fa76c1cc16c115.xlsx
agaric. presumably the brown scales on the whitish cap reminded bulliard of a tiger—perhaps what we might call a leopard these days. the mushroom, he said, is found "in summer and fall in woods on old, rotten trees and more commonly on elms." the elm bulliard had in mind was probably ulmus laevis, the
because, even in north america, lentinus tigrinus is found on the wood of riverbank trees (willows, cottonwoods, silver maples, and so on)—and its preference for frequently soaked wood in floodplains can be inferred from bulliard's original description, even though he did not state it directly, since...
https://www.mushroomexpert.com/lentinus_tigrinus.html