Results 141 to 150 of about 1,420,273 (199)

Plant-based traditional remedies and their role in public health: ethnomedicinal perspectives for a growing population. [PDF]

open access: yesJ Health Popul Nutr
Wang X   +10 more
europepmc   +1 more source

A review of natural products as a source of next-generation drugs against apicomplexan parasites. [PDF]

open access: yesNPJ Antimicrob Resist
Mao EY   +4 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Competitive Relationships between Tree Species of Scalesia (S. pedunculata, S. cordata, S. microcephala) and Introduced Plants (Cinchona succirubra, Psidium guajava, Lantana camara) with Reference to Regeneration Mechanism of Scalesia Forests in the Galapagos Islands

open access: yesCompetitive Relationships between Tree Species of Scalesia (S. pedunculata, S. cordata, S. microcephala) and Introduced Plants (Cinchona succirubra, Psidium guajava, Lantana camara) with Reference to Regeneration Mechanism of Scalesia Forests in the Galapagos Islands
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Cinchona pubescens (quinine tree).

CABI Compendium, 2021
Abstract C. pubescens is a source of the drug quinine, used to control the effects of malaria, and Cinchona bark was being used in Europe as a treatment for malaria as early as the 1650s, before the plant was authenticated botanically (Raintree, 2003).
D. Clements
openaire   +2 more sources

A legacy of medicine and biodiversity: Protecting the cinchona tree

Open Access Government
A legacy of medicine and biodiversity: Protecting the cinchona tree The endangered Cinchona officinalis, native to the Andean foothills, produced the world’s first anti-malarial drug. Augusta Cueva-Agila explains why it is crucial to conserve this species and how conservation efforts can be implemented.
Augusta Cueva-Agila   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Ecosystem changes in Galápagos highlands by the invasive tree Cinchona pubescens

Plant and Soil, 2013
Background and aims Various studies address changes in nitrogen and carbon cycling by exotic plant species, while impacts on phosphorus cycling are understudied. Therefore, we assessed the effects of the introduced Cinchona pubescens Vahl on plant and soil nutrients (especially phosphorus) in the highlands of Santa Cruz Island, Galapagos.
Heinke Jäger   +3 more
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

Clements Robert Markham and the Introduction of the Cinchona Tree into British India, 1861

The Geographical Journal, 1962
AT A time when there is still a tendency for some historians to derogate from British achievements in India, it is hardly surprising that the centenary of the introduction of the cinchona tree from South America should have passed unnoticed. There was undoubtedly an abundance of shortcomings on the part of administrators of the sub-continent, but the ...
Donovan Williams
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