moisture:
Seafoods
Fresh, frozen and dried seafood.Seafood
High quality seafood products, including frozen whole fish, frozen octopus, mackerel, fishmeal, frozen sardines,.
Dragon fruit, charcoal, seafood.Imports, sales, promoting and marketing
Seafood..
Fresh and frozen seafood.
Organic japanese green tea organic japanese matcha (kyoto, kagoshima) organic chinese tea organic chocolate vegan curry yuzu desserts and yuzu juice vegan ramen premium wagyu beef (japanese origin) hokkaido seafood various nuts dried fruits dates saffron rice wheat hand rolled sushi nori (seaweed) taiyaki (japanese fish shaped cake) mochi desserts crepes fruit jellies unagi sushi (eel sushi) pancake mix.
Size range :300g -up
new products from Ontong Java Atoll, Solomon Islands. Shining Black colors. collected, clean and dry
Live Rocks Live rocks are on different shapes and use to protect the fish and inverts into the aquarium. They are collected by the divers and washed with water under pressure by the workers. It takes the worms and moss out of the product. When there is no more water though the product is still humid, it is put into a plastic large bag, then to the wax box .Availability 20 thousand kg or more into a 20" container
Cassis
Triton
Raw Shell Queen Conch
Octopus Seafood Fish available
The razor shell, Ensis arcuatus, also called razor clam or razor fish, is a bivalve of the family Pharidae. It is found on sandy beaches in Northern Europe and Eastern Canada, such as Prince Edward Island, where it is most populous in the world.[citation needed] In some locations, "razor shell" can also refer to members of the family Solenidae, including species of the genera Ensis and Solen,[2] by some taxonomic classifcations which include the family Pharidae within the family Solenidae. It prefers coarser sand than its relatives E. ensis and E. siliqua.
The top shell family is very large, with hundreds of species and many genera. Most show an iridescent interior, numerous whorls, and a horny operculum. Varying shell characteristics have led to specification of several distinctive subfamilies. For example, in the Monodontinae, the base is quite flattened, giving the appearance of an inverted top. In the Calliostominae, a large, rounded aperture opens more to the side and makes the base markedly less flat. In the subfamily, Angarinae, the final whorls become separated rather than remaining sutured, leading to a species rather atypical in appearance.