Peaunut

FOB Price: USD 2300 - 2800
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100 Metric Tons (Min. Order)
  • Supplying Ability100,000 Metric Tons Per Quarter
  • Supplying TypeIn stock
  • Model Number02114
  • Preferred Payment Method:T/T, L/C, D/A, D/P

HCC Export Limited

United States

Port: Lagos, Nigeria

Quick Details

  • brown:red
  • Processing Time:One week
  • Port:Lagos, Nigeria
  • Supply Ability: 100,000 Metric Tons Per Quarter
  • Style:Shell
  • Processing Type:By Hand
  • Place of Origin:Nigeria
  • Packaging:Customer Specification
  • Model Number:280827
  • Grade:Grade A
  • Cultivation Type:Fresh
  • Certification:SGS Certification
  • Brand Name:HCC Peanut
  • Type:Blanched Bold
  • Use:Manufacturing
  • Brand Name:Peanut
Peanut, (Arachis hypogaea), also called groundnut, earthnut, or goober, legume of the pea family (Fabaceae), grown for its edible seeds. Native to tropical South America, the peanut was at an early time introduced to the Old World tropics. The seeds are a nutritionally dense food, rich in protein and fat. Despite its several common names, the peanut is not a true nut. As with other legumes, the plant adds nitrogen to the soil by means of nitrogen-fixing bacteria and is thus particularly valuable as a soil-enriching crop. The peanut is an annual and can either be an erect shrubby plant, 45–60 cm (18–24 inches) high with short branches, or have a spreading form, 30–45 cm (12–18 inches) high with long branches that lie close to the soil. The stems are sturdy and hairy and bear pinnately compound leaves with two pairs of leaflets. The flowers are borne in the axils of the leaves and feature golden-yellow petals about 10 mm (0.4 inch) across. The oblong pods have rounded ends and are most commonly 25–50 mm (1–2 inches) long with two or three seeds; the pods are contracted between the seeds and have a thin, netted, spongy shell. The seeds vary from oblong to nearly round and have a papery seed coat that ranges in colour from whitish to dark purple. Peanut legumes have the peculiar habit of ripening underground, a phenomenon known as geocarpy. After pollination and the withering of the flower, an unusual stalklike structure called a peg grows from the base of the flower toward the soil. The fertilized ovules are carried downward in the sturdy tip of the peg until the tip is well below the soil surface, at which point the peg tip starts to develop into the characteristic pod. The pegs sometimes reach down 10 cm (4 inches) or more before their tips can develop fruits. These unusual fruits appear to function as roots to some degree, absorbing mineral nutrients directly from the soil. The pods may not develop properly unless the soil around them is well supplied with available calcium, regardless of the nutrients available to the roots.