Jump to content

Textile industry is KILLING NATURE!


Recommended Posts

5 hours ago, GurjantGnostic said:

Yes, but nost of them kill you and have no nutritional benefit. It's the rare species of mushroom you can eat for food. They are really a medicine, or variety of medicines but it takes real expertise to identify them. 

For the mention you put the @ with their name right after it. And it'll let you select then. 

What do you make of the below text from internet?

mushrooms can serve as agents for promoting equitable economic growth in society. Since the lignocellulose wastes are available in every corner of the world, they can be properly used in the cultivation of mushrooms, and therefore could pilot a so-called white agricultural revolution in less developed countries and in the world at large. Mushrooms demonstrate a great impact on agriculture and the environment, and they have great potential for generating a great socio-economic impact in human welfare on local, national, and global levels.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, shastarSingh said:

What do you make of the below text from internet?

mushrooms can serve as agents for promoting equitable economic growth in society. Since the lignocellulose wastes are available in every corner of the world, they can be properly used in the cultivation of mushrooms, and therefore could pilot a so-called white agricultural revolution in less developed countries and in the world at large. Mushrooms demonstrate a great impact on agriculture and the environment, and they have great potential for generating a great socio-economic impact in human welfare on local, national, and global levels.

When you know which edible species to eat, and have safety to farm absolutely. They're just a bad foraging food, because of numerous species and potential consequences. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, shastarSingh said:

But what about their environmental benefits?

So far article covers this. Have to get to videos next. 

One of the primary roles of mushrooms in the ecosystem is decomposition, which is performed by the mycelium. Mushroom mycelium can produce a group of complex extracellular enzymes, which can degrade and utilize the lignocellulosic wastes to reduce pollution. Mushroom mycelia can also play a significant role in the restoration of damaged environments. Stamets (2005) has coined a term, mycorestoration, which can be performed in four different ways: mycofiltration (using mycelia to filter toxic waste and microorganisms from water in soil film in the air), mycoforestry (using mycelia to restore forests), mycoremediation (a form of bioremediation using mycelia to decontaminate the area), and mycopesticides (using mycelia to control insect pests). These methods represent the potential to create a clean ecosystem, where no damage will be left after fungal implementation, even if there are some toxic wastes. Bioremediation is a very important technique that involves the use of mushroom mycelia to remove or neutralize a wide variety of pollutants (Kulshreshtha, Mathur, & Bhatnagar, 2013; Purnomo, Mori, Putra, & Kondo, 2013). In order to clean contaminated land, various examples include: spent oyster mushroom substrate performing better than many mushrooms for denaturing of biocide pentrachlorophenol (Chiu, Ching, Fong, & Moore, 1998); removal of biocide pentachlorophenol in water systems using the spent mushroom compost of Pleurotus pulmonarius (Law, Wai, Lau, Lo, & Chiu, 2003); use of spent mushroom compost to bioremediate PAH-contaminated samples (Lau, Tsang, & Chiu, 2003); mycoremediation (bioremediation with fungi)—growing mushrooms to clean the earth (Rhodes, 2014); removal of Escherichia coli from synthetic storm water using mycofiltration (Taylor, Flatt, Beutel, Wolff, Brownson, & Stamets, 2015). In addition, Stamets (2005) provides some excellent examples.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 minutes ago, GurjantGnostic said:

So far article covers this. Have to get to videos next. 

One of the primary roles of mushrooms in the ecosystem is decomposition, which is performed by the mycelium. Mushroom mycelium can produce a group of complex extracellular enzymes, which can degrade and utilize the lignocellulosic wastes to reduce pollution. Mushroom mycelia can also play a significant role in the restoration of damaged environments. Stamets (2005) has coined a term, mycorestoration, which can be performed in four different ways: mycofiltration (using mycelia to filter toxic waste and microorganisms from water in soil film in the air), mycoforestry (using mycelia to restore forests), mycoremediation (a form of bioremediation using mycelia to decontaminate the area), and mycopesticides (using mycelia to control insect pests). These methods represent the potential to create a clean ecosystem, where no damage will be left after fungal implementation, even if there are some toxic wastes. Bioremediation is a very important technique that involves the use of mushroom mycelia to remove or neutralize a wide variety of pollutants (Kulshreshtha, Mathur, & Bhatnagar, 2013; Purnomo, Mori, Putra, & Kondo, 2013). In order to clean contaminated land, various examples include: spent oyster mushroom substrate performing better than many mushrooms for denaturing of biocide pentrachlorophenol (Chiu, Ching, Fong, & Moore, 1998); removal of biocide pentachlorophenol in water systems using the spent mushroom compost of Pleurotus pulmonarius (Law, Wai, Lau, Lo, & Chiu, 2003); use of spent mushroom compost to bioremediate PAH-contaminated samples (Lau, Tsang, & Chiu, 2003); mycoremediation (bioremediation with fungi)—growing mushrooms to clean the earth (Rhodes, 2014); removal of Escherichia coli from synthetic storm water using mycofiltration (Taylor, Flatt, Beutel, Wolff, Brownson, & Stamets, 2015). In addition, Stamets (2005) provides some excellent examples.

Soil is food.

Water is life.

Fungi (mushrooms) can clean both contaminated soil and water.

https://thewaternetwork.com/article-FfV/mycofiltration-harnessing-fungi-to-clean-polluted-water-0oIXXU4D4-DVl7Gvs0jZiw#:~:text=Some fungi%2C including oysters%2C can,activity threaten precious water resources.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share


  • advertisement_alt
  • advertisement_alt
  • advertisement_alt


  • Topics

  • Posts

    • was researching this and came back to this thread. Also found an older thread:    
    • Net pay after taxes. If you don't agree, think about this: If you were a trader and started off in China with silk that cost 100 rupees and came to India, and you had to pay total 800 rupees taxes at every small kingdom along the way, and then sold your goods for 1000 rupees, you'd have 100 rupees left, right? If your daswandh is on the gross, that's 100 rupees, meaning you have nothing left. Obviously, you owe only 10% of 100, not 10% of 1000. No, it's 10% before bills and other expenses. These expenses are not your expenses to earn money. They are consumption. If you are a business owner, you take out all expenses, including rent, shop electricity, cost of goods sold, advertising, and government taxes. Whatever is left is your profit and you owe 10% of that.  If you are an employee, you are also entitled to deduct the cost of earning money. That would be government taxes. Everything else is consumption.    
    • No, bro, it's simply not true that no one talks about Simran. Where did you hear that? Swingdon? The entire Sikh world talks about doing Simran, whether it's Maskeen ji, Giani Pinderpal Singh, Giani Kulwant Singh Jawaddi, or Sants. So what are you talking about? Agreed. Agreed. Well, if every bani were exactly the same, then why would Guru ji even write anything after writing Japji Sahib? We should all enjoy all the banis. No, Gurbani tells you to do Simran, but it's not just "the manual". Gurbani itself also has cleansing powers. I'm not saying not to do Simran. Do it. But Gurbani is not merely "the manual". Reading and singing Gurbani is spiritually helpful: ਪ੍ਰਭ ਬਾਣੀ ਸਬਦੁ ਸੁਭਾਖਿਆ ॥  ਗਾਵਹੁ ਸੁਣਹੁ ਪੜਹੁ ਨਿਤ ਭਾਈ ਗੁਰ ਪੂਰੈ ਤੂ ਰਾਖਿਆ ॥ ਰਹਾਉ ॥ The Lord's Bani and the words are the best utterances. Ever sing hear and recite them, O brother and the Perfect Guru shall save thee. Pause. p611 Here Guru ji shows the importance of both Bani and Naam: ਆਇਓ ਸੁਨਨ ਪੜਨ ਕਉ ਬਾਣੀ ॥ ਨਾਮੁ ਵਿਸਾਰਿ ਲਗਹਿ ਅਨ ਲਾਲਚਿ ਬਿਰਥਾ ਜਨਮੁ ਪਰਾਣੀ ॥੧॥ ਰਹਾਉ ॥ The mortal has come to hear and utter Bani. Forgetting the Name thou attached thyself to other desires. Vain is thy life, O mortal. Pause. p1219 Are there any house manuals that say to read and sing the house manual?
    • All of these are suppositions, bro. Linguists know that, generally, all the social classes of a physical area speak the same language, though some classes may use more advanced vocabulary. I'm talking about the syntax. That is, unless the King is an invader, which Porus was not. When you say Punjabi wasn't very evolved, what do you mean? The syntax must have been roughly the same. As for vocabulary, do you really think Punjabis at the time did nothing more than grunt to express their thoughts? That they had no shades of meaning? Such as hot/cold, red/yellow/blue, angry/sweet/loving/sad, etc? Why must we always have an inferiority complex?
    • I still think about that incident now and then, just haven't heard any developments regarding what happened, just like so many other things that have happened in Panjab!
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use