Pretty much all of them if the species has adapted to handle any toxins. A good example is the koala bear which eats only eucalyptus leaves which are toxic to almost every other animal.
7%
It is not possible to attribute the discovery of edible plants to one specific individual, as the knowledge of edible plants has been passed down through generations of indigenous communities around the world. Hunter-gatherer societies learned through trial and error which plants were safe to eat, and this knowledge was shared within their communities. The cultivation and domestication of edible plants gave rise to agriculture and food production.
Pulse plants are the edible seeds of plants in the legume family.
It is impossible, promethium is highly radioactive.
To the herbivores that live on these grasslands, yes, most are. However, there are plants that are poisonous to animals that are not edible. Locoweed, Death Camas, Water Hemlock and Tall Larkspur are some plants that are poisonous to most natural grassland-dwelling herbivores.
punk
let me see, there are mangoes, bananas, and I believe papayas as well.
all spiders are edible.
A.J Hilliker has written: 'A literature survey of the genotoxic material in edible plants' -- subject(s): Dangerous plants, Edible Plants, Plants, Edible
Alan M Cvancara has written: 'Edible wild plants and herbs' -- subject(s): Edible Wild plants, Wild plants, Edible
Paushali Das has written: 'Wild edible plants of Tripura tribes' -- subject(s): Edible Wild plants, Wild foods, Wild plants, Edible
Muriel Sweet has written: 'Common Edible & Useful Plants of the West' -- subject(s): Botany, Economic, Botany, Plants, Edible, Economic Botany, Edible Plants
A. B. Katende has written: 'Wild food plants and mushrooms of Uganda' -- subject(s): Edible Mushrooms, Edible Wild plants, Identification, Mushrooms, Edible, Plant names, Popular, Popular Plant names, Wild plants, Edible
you can eat it
Emile Massal has written: 'Food plants of the South Sea Islands' -- subject(s): Edible Plants, Oceanica, Plants, Edible
Yes there is an edible plant in Antarctica. The sub-Antarctic edible plant is known as Kerguelen Cabbage.
P. T. Thomas has written: 'Plants, production and people' -- subject(s): Edible Plants, Food supply, Plants, Edible