Supplier: Plant food products : sugar, wheat, corn. soybeans, rice animal food products : chicken, chicken feet, chicken paws, beef, pork. fertilizers: urea 46, nitrogen, phosphate, potassium mineral ores : iron, copper, manganese, zinc.
Made of branches of the coffee bean plant. Once a plant stops producing coffee beans, the branches are used to produce chew sticks for dogs. So extra durable! - Safe: - Suitable for allergic dogs - Healthy: ideal alternative to chews that contain fat or sugar - Natural product: no artificial additives and free from ingredients of animal origin. Also suitable for dogs with allergies - Strong and durable: Especially hard wood from the coffee bean plant: ensures a long-lasting chew and keeps your dog occupied - Without caffeine, calories and artificial additives
Made of branches of the coffee bean plant. Once a plant stops producing coffee beans, the branches are used to produce chew sticks for dogs. So extra durable! - Safe: - Suitable for allergic dogs - Healthy: ideal alternative to chews that contain fat or sugar - Natural product: no artificial additives and free from ingredients of animal origin. Also suitable for dogs with allergies - Strong and durable: Especially hard wood from the coffee bean plant: ensures a long-lasting chew and keeps your dog occupied - Without caffeine, calories and artificial additives
Supplier: Agriculture, vegetables, spices, coconuts, fast moving consumer goods, detergent, bar soap, snack, lifebuoy, dettol, nabati, so klin
Services: Exporter
Supplier: Activated granular & block carbon or other any other carbon, coconuts shells, coconuts shells charcoal & water purifier components. apart from that we are leading manufacturer & supplier of nutritional animal feed like rice & corn ddgs, corn gluten meal, rice protein, soybean meal, rapeseed meal etc & pet food & treats as well, activated carbon, corn kernels, fish oil, â? fish meal, â? corn feed
The primary use of Ammonium Sulphate is as a fertilizer for alkaline soils. In the soil the ammonium ion is released and forms a small amount of acid, lowering the pH balance of the soil, while contributing essential nitrogen for plant growth. The main disadvantage to the use of Ammonium Sulphate is its low nitrogen content relative to Ammonium Nitrate, which elevates transportation costs. It is also used as an agricultural spray adjuvant for water soluble insecticides, herbicides, and fungicides. There it functions to bind iron and calcium cations that are present in both well water and plant cells. It is particularly effective as an adjuvant for 2,4-D (amine), glyphosate and glufosinate herbicides.
Supplier: Wood chips, wood pellets, plywood, fertilizers, iron ore, quartz sand (silica), ilmenite, cassiterite, sulfied copper, manganese ore, lithium ore, pyrite mineral; coal, foundry coke, salt, sorghum, cotton seed, cotton, cottonseed cake; cottonseed meal, soybean, sugar, ic 45,ic 150,ic 180,ic 200,vhp, crystal sugar, ice creams, soybean meal, corn, eucalyptus wood logs, pine wood logs, teak wood logs, mahogany wood, wood pallets, eucalyptus chips, pine chips, rice bran, rice, beans, corn bran, ddg, pork cuts, chicken cuts, coffee beans, beans, black pepper, cashew nuts, chickpeas, cloves, lentils, peanuts, peas, pecan nuts, popcorn, sesame seeds, soft drinks, energy drinks, orange juices, grape juices, cattle feed, beef cattle, pig feed, dog food,pet food, cat food, fish feed, turkey feed, horse feed, frozen pulp, dried (liofilizado), sorbet, apple juice, pine resin, chicken cuts, pork cuts, cattle cuts
Crude Oil: Bonny Light REBCO ESPO (Siberia Pacific Oil) Basra Light WTI Southern Green Cayon Blend Olmeca Mexican crude Heavy Crude, etc. Product Description : Crude oil is a mixture of hydrocarbons that formed from plants and animals that lived millions of years ago. Crude oil is a fossil fuel, and it exists in liquid form in underground pools or reservoirs, in tiny spaces within sedimentary rocks, and near the surface in tar (or oil) sands Price of product ( USD price or FOB price) : Price on request Product origin : Worldwide Key Specifications/Special Features : Specifications for types/grades of crude (special grade needed by buyer) will be issued after received your credible purchase request in the form LOI/ICPO docs. Minimum Order Size and Packgaing details : Bulk in tanker vessels. Tanks 20 MT.
Supplier: Artemia, bride shrimp, gammarus, fish meal, chlorella, spirulina powder, corn gluten meal, meat and bone meal, blood meal, feather meal etc.
PARSLEY (Petroselinum sativum/crispum - Umbelliferae) Parsley is a hardy biennial herb which is native to the eastern Mediterranean. It is thought to have originated in Sardinia, but records show that seeds were imported to Britain from Sardinia in 1548; the plant had already been introduced to northern Europe by the Romans. There are several varieties of the herb. The curly leaved or moss-curled is the one most familiar in Britain as a garnish. The plain- or flat-leaved, continental parsley has heavily divided leaves, but they are not so curly; this is the plant which can be confused with another, Aethusa cynapium or fool's parsley, which is poisonous. Less familiar is the Neapolitan parsley from southern Italy which has thick stalks, eaten in Italy like celery (and, in fact, its French name is 'persil aux jeuilles de cileri'). All parsleys have carrot-shaped roots which can be eaten, but the Hamburg parsley (P. fusiformis) has been developed for its roots rather than its leaves. The common parsleys have dark green leaves, pale yellow-green flowers in umbels, followed by fruit seeds. The name petroselinum comes from the Greek for rock celery, referring to the natural habitat of the plant. Interestingly, selinum is thought to be the same as selinon, the Greek name for celery; the Romans called parsley 'apium', also the botanical name for celery; and French fool's parsley is called ache des chiens, ache also once a name for wild celery. Celery also belongs to the Umbelliferae family, and possibly there have been confusions over the years. The Ancient Egyptians used parsley, as did the Greeks, who crowned victorious soldiers with wreaths of it. Hercules did this after killing the Nemean lion, and thereafter victors in the Nemean and Isthmian games would do the same. They believed that parsley had grown from the blood of a hero, Archemorus, and Homer tells of a victory won by charioteers whose horses had renewed vigour after eating parsley. Parsley grew on Circe's lawn in the Odyssey. Pliny said that no sauce or salad should be without parsley, as did Galen, and both Pliny and Dioscorides thought of it as a diuretic and emmenagogue. Apicius sang its praises too. The Byzantines used it as a diuretic and made a strong infusion to help kidney stones. Charlemagne ordered that it be cultivated in the imperial gardens as a vegetable, and it was eaten at every meal. It also found a place in monastic gardens at this time. More recently, in the nineteenth century research was done on the emmenagogic properties of a constituent of the oil, apiol, by Professor Galligo, and doctors de Poggeschi and Marrotte. These were later confirmed by Dr Leclerc, proving to be truly efficaceous in treating cases of menstrual problems, particularly pain.