Stamp: Mandarin Oranges (Nepal 2025)

Mandarin Oranges (Nepal 2025)

04 June (Nepal ) within release Genetic Agricultural Resources (2025) goes into circulation Stamp Mandarin Oranges face value 10 Nepalese rupee

Stamp Mandarin Oranges in catalogues
Colnect codes: Col: NP 2025.06.04-01d

Stamp is horizontal format.

stamp from se-tenant block of eight

Also in the issue Genetic Agricultural Resources (2025):

Data entry completed
60%
Stamp Mandarin Oranges in digits
Country: Nepal
Date: 2025-06-04
Print: Offset lithography
Size: 45 x 35
Perforation: Serpentine Die Cut
Emission: Commemorative
Format: Stamp
Face Value: 10 Nepalese rupee
Print run: 125000

Stamp Mandarin Oranges it reflects the thematic directions:

Agriculture is the cultivation and breeding of animals, plants and fungi for food, fiber, biofuel, medicinal plants and other products used to sustain and enhance human life.[1] Agriculture was the key development in the rise of sedentary human civilization, whereby farming of domesticated species created food surpluses that nurtured the development of civilization. The study of agriculture is known as agricultural science. The history of agriculture dates back thousands of years, and its development has been driven and defined by greatly different climates, cultures, and technologies. Industrial agriculture based on large-scale monoculture farming has become the dominant agricultural methodology.

In botany, a berry is a fleshy fruit without a drupe (pit) produced from a single flower containing one ovary. Berries so defined include grapes, currants, and tomatoes, as well as cucumbers, eggplants (aubergines), persimmons and bananas, but exclude certain fruits that meet the culinary definition of berries, such as strawberries and raspberries. The berry is the most common type of fleshy fruit in which the entire outer layer of the ovary wall ripens into a potentially edible "pericarp". Berries may be formed from one or more carpels from the same flower (i.e. from a simple or a compound ovary).: 291 The seeds are usually embedded in the fleshy interior of the ovary, but there are some non-fleshy exceptions, such as Capsicum species, with air rather than pulp around their seeds.

None