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The plant is poisonous, containing cardiostimulant compounds such as adonidin and aconitic acid. [42] Aesculus hippocastanum: horse-chestnut, buckeye, conker tree Sapindaceae: All parts of the raw plant are poisonous due to saponins and glycosides such as aesculin, causing nausea, muscle twitches, and sometimes paralysis. [43] Agave spp.
Veratrum californicum (California corn lily, white or California false hellebore) is an extremely poisonous plant [1] native to western North America, including the Sierra Nevada and Rocky Mountains, as far north as Washington and as far south as Durango; depending on latitude, it grows from near sea level to as high as 11,000 feet.
Oxytropis lambertii commonly known as purple locoweed, [3] Colorado locoweed, [4] Lambert's crazy weed, [5] or Lambert’s Locoweed [6] is a species of flowering plant in the legume family. Distribution
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Locoweed (also crazyweed and loco) is a common name in North America for any plant that produces swainsonine, an alkaloid harmful to livestock.Worldwide, swainsonine is produced by a small number of species, most of them in three genera of the flowering plant family Fabaceae: Oxytropis and Astragalus in North America, [1] and Swainsona in Australia.
Delphinium geyeri is a poisonous plant, though the toxicity of the plant is variable from year to year. It also varies in toxicity during the year with the plant's being most toxic before it flowers. [6] This has been known since at least 1916. [29] The primary toxic agents are browniine, 14-acetylbrowniine, geyerine, and 14-dehydrobrowniine.
The plant has been used in folk medicine for centuries. [44] There is a reference to "Lilly of the valley water" in Robert Louis Stevenson 's 1886 novel Kidnapped , where it is said to be "good against the Gout", and that it "comforts the heart and strengthens the memory" and "restores speech to those that have the dumb palsey". [ 45 ]
Datura stramonium, known by the common names thornapple, jimsonweed (jimson weed), or devil's trumpet, [2] is a poisonous flowering plant in the Daturae tribe of the nightshade family Solanaceae. [3] Its likely origin was in Central America , [ 2 ] [ 4 ] and it has been introduced in many world regions.