Results 191 to 200 of about 7,966 (231)
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Chemical Constituents of Crotalaria madurensis
Journal of Natural Products, 1984Two new compounds, crotmadine (1) and crotmarine (3); a known pyrrolizidine alkaloid, fulvine (8), and three other known compounds, trans-3,4,3',5'-tetra methoxystilbene (5), dihydroalpinumisoflavone (6), and 4',5,7-trihydroxy-3-methoxyflavone (7), have been isolated from the leaves and stems of Crotalaria madurensis. Both crotmadine (1) and crotmarine
D S, Bhakuni, R, Chaturvedi
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TOXICITY OF CROTALARIA GOREENSIS FOR CHICKENS
Australian Veterinary Journal, 1979SUMMARY: Ground Crotalaria goreensis seed fed to day‐old cockerel chickens at 3 different rates in a commercial ration of chick starter mash depressed growth rates. Moist faeces were common. Lesions consistently found included ulceration of the proximal large intestine and a dark grey discolouration of the glandular portion of the proventriculus.
J H, Norton, P K, O'Rourke
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The toxicity of Crotalaria saltiana to calves
Journal of Comparative Pathology, 1981Abstract Zebu calves were fed with fresh shoots of Crotalaria saltiana at the rates of 1, 5 and 10 g per kg per day for periods up to 311 days. The signs of Crotalaria poisoning in calves were inappetence, staggering, unthriftness, dyspnoea, pallor of the visible mucous membranes and recumbency.
M E, Barri, S E, Adam
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2000
Abstract Several species of the plant genus Crotalaria contain pyr rolizidine alkaloids (Table 18) with hepatotoxic, pneumo toxic, and carcinogenic properties (1,2,3). In humans, acute or chronic intoxication leads to severe liver necrosis from veno-occlusive disease and eventually causes hepatic en cephalopathy; the genus is not ...
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Abstract Several species of the plant genus Crotalaria contain pyr rolizidine alkaloids (Table 18) with hepatotoxic, pneumo toxic, and carcinogenic properties (1,2,3). In humans, acute or chronic intoxication leads to severe liver necrosis from veno-occlusive disease and eventually causes hepatic en cephalopathy; the genus is not ...
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Effects of Shading and Temperature on Showy Crotalaria (Crotalaria spectabilis)
Weed Science, 1982Showy crotalaria (Crotalaria spectabilisRoth) was grown in a controlled-environment greenhouse with a day/night temperature of 32/26C at full sunlight and under 40, 60, or 90% shade. Shading significantly reduced height, dry-matter accumulation, leaf production, leaf-area expansion, axillary-branch development, reproductive development, and the ...
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