News

*School of Life Sciences, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, New Territories, Hong Kong, China. Tel: 852 39436144. Fax: 26037246. E-mail: [email protected] Article Views are the ...
Plans and pricing Video Back ...
But did you know that there is a vegan egg too? Yes, you read it right, there is an egg-shaped mushroom called Volvariella volvacea, commonly known as the paddy straw mushroom,and it is an edible ...
ABSTRACT: Piptoporellus baudonii, previously known as Laetiporus baudonii, is an African species that was considered to be a sister species to Laetiporus sulphureus, another European species known for ...
Volvariella volvacea is a mushroom of the tropics and subtropics grown extensively as a source of fresh vegetables in some South East Asian countries. In Western countries, so far as we know ...
KUALA NERANG - Eight years ago, a rubber tapper from Kampung Musa here decided to farm the Volvariella mushroom, also known as straw mushroom or palm mushroom, to generate extra income due to the ...
Some harmless and even edible mushrooms may look very similar to the death cap. For example, Asian straw mushrooms, also known as paddy straw mushrooms (Volvariella volvacea), can also be short and ...
For an immersive experience that gets you up close and personal with nature (safely, of course), dive in with the manta rays (which are barbless!) at Mauna Kea Beach Resort on the Big Island of ...
A death cap looks like the Asian straw mushroom (Volvariella volvacea) and other common Asian varieties of edible Amanita species. "The symptoms of death cap mushroom poisoning include low blood ...
Death caps can be confused with the Paddy Straw mushroom, or halmslidskivling (Volvariella volvacea) which are popular in Thailand, and as a result with Thai immigrants. The Paddy Straw doesn't grow ...
At the time, a friend of Mr Liu told The Canberra Times that the chef had picked the death caps after work and mistook them for straw mushrooms (Volvariella volvacea), which are popular in Asian ...
However, repeated succession increases strain degeneration. In this study, we examined the effect of repeated tissue isolation from Volvariella volvacea fruitbodies on the occurrence of degeneration.