enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Benzamidine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benzamidine

    Benzamidine is a reversible competitive inhibitor of trypsin, trypsin-like enzymes, and serine proteases. [4] It is often used as a ligand in protein crystallography to prevent proteases from degrading a protein of interest. The benzamidine moiety is also found in some pharmaceuticals, such as dabigatran.

  3. Frugivore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frugivore

    A Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) eating a fruit. A frugivore (/ f r uː dʒ ɪ v ɔːr /) is an animal that thrives mostly on raw fruits or succulent fruit-like produce of plants such as roots, shoots, nuts and seeds. Approximately 20% of mammalian herbivores eat fruit. [1]

  4. Florivore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florivore

    In zoology, a florivore (not to be confused with a folivore) is an animal which mainly eats products of flowers.Florivores are types of herbivores (often referred to as floral herbivores), yet within the feeding behaviour of florivory, there are a range of other more specific feeding behaviours, including, but not limited to: [1]

  5. Viburnum edule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viburnum_edule

    The tart fruit is commonly consumed fresh, however it can also be used to prepare foods such as jams and jellies. [6] [22] Many animals consume the wild berries as a part of their diet, while smaller animals can use the plant as shelter. [6] [23] Multiple parts of the Viburnum edule plant have been used in herbal medicine.

  6. Datura innoxia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Datura_innoxia

    Datura innoxia is quite similar to D. metel, to the point of being confused with it in early scientific literature. D. metel is a closely related plant, believed until recently to be of Old World provenance (though now thought to have been brought to Asia from the Antilles no earlier than the sixteenth century) and misconstrued as being referred to in the works of Avicenna in eleventh century ...

  7. Hura crepitans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hura_crepitans

    The Caribs made arrow poison from its sap. [15] The wood is used for furniture under the name "hura". In a time when most writing pens left wet ink on the page, the trees' unripe seed capsules were sawn in half to make decorative boxes (also called pounce pots) to hold the "sand" used to dry it, hence the name 'sandbox tree'. It has been ...

  8. Annona glabra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annona_glabra

    A fruit contains 100 or more convex, light yellow-brown seeds, about 1 cm long. [5] A. glabra flowers have a short life-span, and have a diameter of 2–3 cm. The flowers have three outer petals as well as three inner petals. Compared to the pale yellow or cream color of the petals, the inner base of the A. glabra flower is a bright red. [4]

  9. Solanum dulcamara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solanum_dulcamara

    Solanum dulcamara is a species of vine in the genus Solanum (which also includes the potato and the tomato) of the family Solanaceae.Common names include bittersweet, bittersweet nightshade, bitter nightshade, blue bindweed, Amara Dulcis, [3] climbing nightshade, [4] felonwort, fellenwort, felonwood, poisonberry, poisonflower, scarlet berry, snakeberry, [5] [6] [7] trailing bittersweet ...