Skip to main content

POSIONOUS PLANTS NAMES



POSIONOUS PLANTS NAMES: 


  • FOXGLOVE
  • Peloria’ being the Greek word for ‘Monster
  •  Digitalis purpurea monstrosa
  • Salvia divinorum has made its Spring return to The Poison Garden. Illegal to posses and to grow in the UK, this plant can cause severe and often terrifying hallucinogenic effects! Learn more on a Poison Garden Tour!
  • DEAD HEADING ROSES
  • Catha edulis: Se trata de la planta con las propiedades psicoestimulantes más potentes que se conoce hasta el momento. Sus principios activos son los alcaloides psicotrópicos catina y catinona. Ambas son moléculas psicoestimulantes, derivadas de la fenetilamina, y emparentadas química y funcionalmente con las anfetaminas.
  • Ricinus communis:  Produce gran cantidad de semillas altamente viables y sumamente venenosas. Se calcula que tan solo cuatro semillas pueden matar a un adulto de tamaño medio. Sin embargo, de esta planta se pueden extraer compuestos anticancerígenos y el aceite de ricino, que es comestible. Esto mediante un proceso de separación del aceite. También es una especie ornamental preferida en jardines.
  • higuera del demonio, higuera de infierno, higuera del demonio (2), higuera del diablo (7), higuera del infierno (6), higuera infernal (10), higuereta (5), higuereta infernal, higuerilla, higuerillo
  • Helleborus Odorus
  • Atropa Belladonna
  • Laburnum
  • Dendrocnide moroides, llamada comúnmente gimpi gimpi, yimpi yimpi o el aguijón del suicidio,1​ es una especie del género Dendrocnide nativo de las selvas tropicales del norte y este de Australia, las islas Molucas e Indonesia. Es conocida por sus pelos urticantes que cubren toda la planta e introducen en la piel una potente neurotoxina cuando se tocan las hojas o ramas. Es la especie más virulenta del género.
  • Bitter Nightshade. Commonly found in creeks, gardens and parks, these vines or shrubs have been found to cause livestock and pet poisoning.
  • Oleander. All parts of the oleander plant are toxic. Oleandrin, an extract of the plant, may affect heart function and could prove lethal at the wrong dose ..
  • Angel's Trumpet. When flowers, leaves or seeds are eaten, problems such as dry mouth, muscle weakness, high blood pressure, fast pulse, difficult urination ...
  • Daffodil. The bulbs are the most poisonous part of these so-called friendly flowers, so you might think twice about planting them if you have a dog who ...
  • Daffodils contain lycorine which is a toxic chemical. Lycorine is most concentrated in the bulb. Eating any part of a daffodil, including the bulb, will ...
  • Poison hemlock is a member of the carrot family. All parts of the plant are toxic. It grows across most of North America. Poison hemlock prefers to grow in ..
  • Rosary Pea
  • Mangifera indica: Mango leaves, stems, peels, and sap contain urushiol, an allergen also present in poison ivy, poison oak, and poison sumac that can cause urushiol-induced contact dermatitis in susceptible people.[citation needed] Cross-reactions between mango contact allergens and urushiol have been observed. Those with a history of poison ivy or poison oak contact dermatitis may be most at risk for such an allergic reaction. During mango's primary ripening season, it is the most common source of plant dermatitis in Hawaii.
  • Myristica fragrans:Contains myristicin, a naturally occurring insecticide and acaricide with possible neurotoxic effects on neuroblastoma cells.[13] It has psychoactive properties at doses much higher than used in cooking. Raw nutmeg produces anticholinergic-like symptoms, attributed to myristicin and elemicin.[14] The intoxicating effects of myristicin can lead to a physical state somewhere between waking and dreaming; euphoria is reported and nausea is often experienced.
  • Adonis vernalis:The plant is poisonous, containing cardiostimulant compounds such as adonidin and aconitic acid.
  • Ageratina altissima: All parts contain a toxic oil known as tremetol, which causes nausea and vomiting and is often fatal. Milk sickness is caused by drinking milk from cattle that have eaten white snakeroot, which can sicken or kill humans.
  • Argemone mexicana:A. mexicana seeds contain 22–36% of a pale yellow non-edible oil called argemone oil or katkar oil, which contains the toxic alkaloids sanguinarine and dihydrosanguinarine. Katkar oil poisoning causes epidemic dropsy, with symptoms including extreme swelling, particularly of the legs.
  • Cascabela thevetia: All parts of the plant are toxic to most vertebrates as they contain cardiac glycosides. Many cases of intentional and accidental poisoning of humans are known
  • Codiaeum variegatum: As with many of the Euphorbiaceae, the sap can cause skin eczema in some people. The bark, roots, latex, and leaves are poisonous.
  • Daphne sp: The berries (either red or yellow) are poisonous, causing burns to the mouth and digestive tract, followed by coma; often fatal
  • Datura s: Containing the tropane alkaloids scopolamine, hyoscyamine, and atropine, all parts of these plants are poisonous, especially the seeds and flowers. Ingestion causes abnormal thirst, hyperthermia, severe delirium and incoherence, visual distortions, bizarre and possibly violent behavior, memory loss, coma, and often death; it is a significant poison to grazing livestock in North America. Datura has been used as an entheogenic drug by the indigenous peoples of the Americas and others for centuries, though the extreme variability in a given plant's toxicity depending on its age and growing environment make such usage an exceptionally hazardous practice; the difference between a recreational dose and a lethal dose is minuscule
  • sacred datura.
  • Deathcamas:All parts of these plants are toxic, due to the presence of alkaloids. Grazing animals, such as sheep and cattle, may be affected and human fatalities have occurred
  • Excoecaria agallocha
  • Galanthus nivalis
  • Gelsemium sempervirens
  • Gloriosa superba
  • sosnowskyi
  • Siberian iris
  • Lilium
  • Nicotiana glauca
  • Oenanthe crocata
  • Plumeria
  •  false acacia.Robinia
  • Sanguinaria
  • veratrum
  • Vernicia fordii
  • Wisteria sinensis
  • Xanthium

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Luciérnagas

  Luciérnagas Revolotea de aqui a allá, Se cansa de jugar, Con los ojos abiertos, No se puede soñar, Entre los campos silvestres, Devora uno que otro fruto rojo, Bajo un girasol dormido, Dice que duerme pero con enojo, Un último vistazo a la luna, Susurra entre luciérnagas, Se ha perdido entre fulgores, La luna yace semi muerta, Se acurruca entre los nenúfares, Se acomoda para hacerse una cuna, Dormir no quiere, se enfurece, Mañana y otro día, es lo que quiere. L.C.Noctividus

Fugacidad

  Fugacidad Ábreme, Como la lluvia de abril, De par en par y sin pensar, Decídete, Así como las dahlias a la tierra, Como el humo al fuego, Como las serpientes a la hoguera, Arriésgate, Entre una pared y las horas, Mediante el tragaluz en Midian, Sonámbulo ante las antorchas, Disuelvete, Aunque de estaño insoluble sea tu piel, Aunque puro sea el bronce de tu pensar, Excavaciones sobre tu arder y tu amar, Rompete En medio del océano y de la tempestad, En mil fractales como tu costumbre es, Entre la fugacidad y la eternidad, Piensame Aunque el invierno venga por ti, Aunque de otoños haya que vivir, Y a las lunas se tenga que rezar. L.C. Noctividus

Lime and Anise

  Lime and Anise Im at unrest, Arrested by thy name, Through the hours and the flames, Revelations haunt me by days, Consign the seals for my bodies, And all that hides between manuscripts, Like hell unleashed waiting to be read, Red is the sin, red scarlet within a kiss, Cause its ending, All my souls are bound to one being, Tied and recovering from wandering, Like a golden string between my limbs, It is not fate, Is promise and debt, Sunset and licorice, Lime and anise, Turquoise and garnet. L.C.Noctividus