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Diversity of Wild Edible Mushrooms in Indian Subcontinent and Its Neighboring Countries
Author(s) -
Madhu Choudhary,
Ritu Devi,
Ashim Datta,
Arvind Kumar,
H. S. Jat
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
recent advances in biology and medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2378-654X
DOI - 10.18639/rabm.2015.01.200317
Subject(s) - indian subcontinent , diversity (politics) , geography , biology , ecology , ethnology , history , sociology , anthropology
Mushrooms are cosmopolitan heterotrophic organisms that are quite specific in their nutritional and ecological requirements. They are among the most relished food commodities among a number of nonconventional foodstuffs primarily because of their unique flavor and texture. Wild edible mushrooms have been collected and consumed by people since thousands of years. Mushrooms have been exploited commercially the world over. In India due to its diverse climatic conditions, many types of mushrooms are found in the wild. The knowledge of their historical uses as food, medicine, a source of income, and for small-scale businesses and the sociological impacts (myth, culture, and spirituality) are apparently threatened due to slow ethnomycology-research drive.

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