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  2. List of poisonous plants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_poisonous_plants

    The plant's toxicity has led to the U.S. FDA officially declaring it to be unsafe. Arum maculatum: cuckoo-pint, lords and ladies, jack-in-the-pulpit, wake robin, wild arum, devils and angels, cows and bulls, Adam and Eve, bobbins, starch-root Araceae: All parts of the plant are highly toxic to humans and most animals.

  3. Hypholoma fasciculare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypholoma_fasciculare

    Hypholoma fasciculare, commonly known as the sulphur tuft or clustered woodlover, is a common woodland mushroom, often in evidence when hardly any other mushrooms are to be found. This saprotrophic small gill fungus grows prolifically in large clumps on stumps, dead roots or rotting trunks of broadleaved trees.

  4. Sulfide intrusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulfide_intrusion

    In ecology, sulfide intrusion refers to an excess of sulfide molecules (S 2-) in the soil that interfere with plant growth, often seagrass. [1] [2] [3]Seagrass bed sediment (soil) is typically anoxic, containing a reduced form of sulfur: hydrogen sulfide (H 2 S).

  5. Laetiporus sulphureus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laetiporus_sulphureus

    Its common names are sulphur polypore, sulphur shelf, and chicken-of-the-woods. Its fruit bodies grow as striking golden-yellow shelf-like structures on tree trunks and branches. Old fruitbodies fade to pale beige or pale grey. The undersurface of the fruit body is made up of tubelike pores rather than gills.

  6. Chinese farmers across 14 towns are spraying industrial ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/chinese-farmers-across-14-towns...

    "With the sulfur, you can store it longer, and pests don't grow. Its toxicity is high." CCTV aired footage of farm workers preparing vats of thick, foaming sodium metabisulfite before washing the ...

  7. Sulfur metabolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sulfur_metabolism

    Sulfur reduction occurs in plants, fungi, and many bacteria. [10] Sulfate can serve as an electron acceptor in anaerobic respiration and can also be reduced for the formation of organic compounds. Sulfate-reducing bacteria reduce sulfate and other oxidized sulfur compounds, such as sulfite, thiosulfate, and elemental sulfur, to sulfide.

  8. Cosmos sulphureus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmos_sulphureus

    Cosmos sulphureus is a species of flowering plant in the sunflower family Asteraceae, also known as sulfur cosmos and yellow cosmos. It is native to Mexico , Central America , and northern South America , and naturalized in other parts of North and South America as well as in Europe, Asia, and Australia.

  9. Toxicodendron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toxicodendron

    The generic name is derived from the Greek words τοξικός (toxikos), meaning "poison," and δένδρον (dendron), meaning "tree". [3] The best-known members of the genus in North America are eastern poison ivy ( T. radicans ) and western poison oak ( T. diversilobum ), both ubiquitous throughout much of their respective region.