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  2. Agastache urticifolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agastache_urticifolia

    The leaves are up to 8 centimeters long and 7 wide. The inflorescence is a dense spike of many flowers. Each flower has long sepals tipped with bright purple and tubular corollas in shades of pink and purple. The fruit is a light brown, fuzzy nutlet about 2 millimeters long.

  3. Achyranthes aspera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Achyranthes_aspera

    The flowering spikes, rubbed with a little sugar, are made into pills, and given internally to people bitten by mad dogs. The leaves, taken fresh and reduced to a pulp, are considered a good remedy when applied externally to the bites of scorpions. The ashes of the plant yield a considerable quantity of potash, which is used in washing clothes ...

  4. List of plants used in herbalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_plants_used_in...

    Horse chestnut: Its seeds, leaves, bark, and flowers have been used medicinally for many centuries for treating joint pain, bladder and gastrointestinal problems, fever, leg cramps, and other conditions. It may be useful for treating chronic venous insufficiency. The raw plant materials are toxic unless processed. [7] Ageratina altissima: White ...

  5. Symplocos tinctoria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symplocos_tinctoria

    Symplocos tinctoria (the common sweetleaf, [3] horse-sugar, or yellowwood) is a deciduous or evergreen shrub or tree. It is recognized by pith of twigs chambered; by foliage not notably aromatic when bruised, leaves finely hairy beneath. Shrubs or trees to 17 m tall by 36 cm diameter at breast height. The largest first-year twigs are under 3 mm ...

  6. Equisetum arvense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equisetum_arvense

    E. arvense has been used in traditional Austrian herbal medicine internally as tea, or externally as baths or compresses, for treatment of disorders of the skin, locomotor system, kidneys and urinary tract, rheumatism and gout. [citation needed] Externally it was traditionally used for chilblains and wounds. [20]

  7. Aesculus hippocastanum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aesculus_hippocastanum

    Horse chestnut scale, caused by the insect Pulvinaria regalis; Horse-chestnut leaf miner, Cameraria ohridella, a leaf mining moth. [40] The larvae of this moth species bore through the leaves of the horse chestnut, causing premature colour changes and leaf loss. [39] Phytophthora bleeding canker, a fungal infection. [41]

  8. Equisetidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equisetidae

    However, the leaves of Equisetum probably arose by the reduction of megaphylls, as evidenced by early fossil forms such as Sphenophyllum, in which the leaves are broad with branching veins. [ 4 ] The vascular bundles trifurcate at the nodes, with the central branch becoming the vein of a microphyll, and the other two moving left and right to ...

  9. Equisetum hyemale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equisetum_hyemale

    Equisetum hyemale strobilus, at DarÅ‚ówko on the Baltic Sea coast of Poland. Equisetum hyemale is native to central and northern Eurasia, including Iceland, Greenland, Kamchatka and Japan, where it forms clonal colonies in mesic (reliably moist) habitats, often in heavy clay or sandy soils in riparian zones of rivers and streams where it can withstand occasional flooding, but also in lime ...