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    Phytolacca dodecandra pdf merge >> DOWNLOAD

    Phytolacca dodecandra pdf merge >> READ ONLINE

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    In East Africa P.dodecandra is used in schistosomiasis control. Phytolacca americana plants are shrubs or trees, annual, likewise perennial, the stems are erect up to 1-3 m heighth. The leaves are pinnate, opposite or appearing whorled, ovate, 10-15 cm long, 4-12 cm broad, margins entire, often undulated.
    Key Characters: Robust, but non-woody plant to 9 feet tall; stems green or purplish- red; leaves up to 1 foot long, ovate, with smooth or wavy margins; flowers several in elongate clusters, white or pinkish; fruiting spikes drooping, the fruit with 10 seeds, turning from green to purple starting in mid to late summer and continuing until frost.
    General Information Phytolacca acinosa is a herbaceous perennial plant growing 50 – 150cm tall from a thick, fleshy rootstock
    Phytolacca dodecandra L’Herit., por vezes referido pelo seu sinonimo taxonomico Sarcoca dodecandra, e um arbusto escandente nativo da Africa tropical e do sul e Madagascar [1].A planta, conhecida pelo nome comum de endod (????; o seu nome em amarico), e cultivado ha varios seculos no centro e leste da Africa, particularmente na Etiopia, onde e utilizada como fonte de Control of schistosomiasis (bilharzia) using berries from Phytolacca dodecandra (endod) Kjell B. Esser, Svein Gunnar Gundersen, Teshome Gebre-Michael and Legesse Wolde-Yohannes Infection site (photo S.G. Gundersen) P.O.Box 5001, NO-1432 As, Norway
    The fruits of Phytolacca dodecandra are harvested when full-grown but still green as the saponin content is then highest. Ripe fruits are hard to harvest as they fall from the plant and are eaten by birds. Complete fruit bunches are collected manually (Legesse Wolde-Yohannes, 1992; Zimudzi, 2007). Propagation and planting
    Journal of Ethnopharmacology 85 (2003) 269-277 Medicinal use and social status of the soap berry endod (Phytolacca dodecandra) in Ethiopia Kjell B. Essera,?, Kassa Semagnb, Legesse Wolde-Yohannesb a Center for International Environment and Development Studies (Noragric), Agricultural University of Norway,
    This study assessed the pesticidal activities of Phytolacca dodecandra extracts in controlling S itophilus zeamais and T ribolium castaneum pests in stored maize grains. The study was conducted at ambient conditions (25-30°C and 65-70% relative humidity) and designed in a completely randomised design with 8 treatments in triplicate.
    Active Ingredients:** Phytolacca decandra 3X to 30X – 3C to 30C HPUS; The letters HPUS indicate that this ingredient is officially included in the Homeopathic Pharmacop?ia of the United States.
    From the dried roots of Phytolacca dodecandra, the three known olean-12-ene-dicarboxylic acids phytolaccagenin, phytolaccagenic acid and serjanic acid and two new genins, named as dodecandral and dodecandralol, have been isolated and characterized.The two new compounds have at C-20 an aldehyde function instead of a carboxyl group or its methyl ester.
    —Phytolacca dioica, Linne (Pircunia dioica, Moquin-Tandon). A tree about 25 feet high and from 6 to 10 feet in circumference; native of Brazil or Mexico, and naturalized in Algeria. The wood is spongy. The berries grow in racemes, are yellowish-green, 12 to 15-celled, each cell containing a
    Phytolacca americana L. (syn. P. decandra L.) belongs to the Phyto-laccaceae [1]. English vernacular names include poke, pokeweed, pokeroot, pokeberry, inkberry, pigeon berry, American nightshade, scoke, pocan, red ink, and garget [2-5]. The plant is known as Kermes in German and as phytolaque in French [2].
    Phytolacca americana L. (syn. P. decandra L.) belongs to the Phyto-laccaceae [1]. English vernacular names include poke, pokeweed, pokeroot, pokeberry, inkberry, pigeon berry, American nightshade, scoke, pocan, red ink, and garget [2-5]. The plant is known as Kermes in German and as phytolaque in French [2].
    Multi-story cropping systems are used to grow fruits and vegetables in rural homegardens, and it has been argued that they are crucial for the food and nutrition safety of rural populations. They also are considered as refuges for a number of plant species, and as one way to reduce pressure on the surrounding ecosystem by providing resources such as food, fiber, and firewood to farmers on
    ethanol and water extracts of Phytolacca dodecandra (L’ Herit) against Anopheles gambiae (Diptera: Culicidae) larvae. Methods: Crude ethanol and water extracts of leaves (shoot and midsection) and mature green fruits of P. dodecandra were scrutinized for larvicidal activity against 1st to 4th instar larvae of An. gambiae. Larvicidal bioassays

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