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cycas_revoluta_thunb [2015/02/08 07:26] andreascycas_revoluta_thunb [2026/01/16 08:42] (aktuell) andreas
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 Cycas revoluta Thunb. - Cycadaceae - sago Cycas,China Sago Palm, Japan Sago Palm, **Japanischer Sagopalmfarn** Cycas revoluta Thunb. - Cycadaceae - sago Cycas,China Sago Palm, Japan Sago Palm, **Japanischer Sagopalmfarn**
  
-Native to Japan, Formosa, China, cultivated in India; trunk 1.80m high, densely clothed with old leave bases; leaves 0.60-1.80m long, quadrangular, thick petioled; leaflets narrow, margins revolute; carpophylls 10-23cm long, blade ovate, laciniate nearly the midrib, stalk longer than blade with 4-6 ovules; immature seeds densely tomentose. \\ +Native to Japan, Formosa, China, cultivated in India; trunk 1.80m high, densely clothed with old leave bases; leaves 0.60-1.80m long, quadrangular, thick petioled; leaflets narrow, margins revolute; carpophylls 10-23cm long, blade ovate, laciniate nearly the midrib, stalk longer than blade with 4-6 ovules; immature seeds densely tomentose. [Kirkitar KR, Basu BD, Indian Medicinal Plants, Vol. IV, Delhi 1975] \\ 
-[Kirkitar KR, Basu BD, Indian Medicinal Plants, Vol. IV, Delhi 1975] +"Cycas revoluta is the most commonly cultivated cycad because of its ornamental appearance, hardiness, and adaptability." [[http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=200005230|efloras.org]]
  
-"Cycas revoluta is the most commonly cultivated cycad because of its ornamental appearance, hardiness, and adaptability." \\ 
-[[http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=200005230]] 
  
-"Bark boiled in water is used to wash burns." \\ +"It is one of several species used for the production of sagoas well as an ornamental plant." [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycas_revoluta|wikipedia]]
-[Medical ethnobotany of the Marma tribe of Bangladesh.Alam, M.K., Economic Botany, Vol.46(3), 1992, 330-335]+
  
-"Skin infectionsLeaves are crushed and applied to affected areasPrecautions: must not be applied too frequently." \\ +The scent of male and female cones of C.revoluta was described as strong and unpleasant. "...estragole (4-allylanisole) dominated in the volatiles (67.0-92.7%), with small amounts of other benzenoids, e.g., anethole, methyl salicylate, methyl eugenol, and ethyl benzoateSeveral fatty acid esters were also detected in the samples from Iriomote Island." \\ 
-[Ethnomedicinal survey of Bheramara area in Kushtia districtBangladesh., Rahmatullah, M., FerdausiD.MollikM.A.H., Azam, M.N.K., Rahman, M.T., Jahan, R., American Eurasian Journal of Sustainable Agriculture, Vol.3(3), 2009534-541]+[Estragole (4-allylanisole) is the primary compound in volatiles emitted from the male and female cones of Cycas revoluta.Azuma, H., Kono, M., Journal of plant research119(6)2006671-676] 
 + 
 +|{{estragole.jpg|}} \\ estragole \\ (methyl chavicol) | {{anethol.jpg|anethole}} \\ anethole | {{betacyclocitral.jpg|β-cyclocitral}} \\ β-cyclocitral |{{:isoamyl_acetate.png|}} \\ isoamyl acetate |{{:acetoin_ac.png|}} \\ acetoin (R=H)|  
 + 
 +A scent sample trapped from C.revoluta contained also estragole (33.0%) as dominating compoundtogether with [[http://www.thegoodscentscompany.com/data/rw1037211.html|β-cyclocitral]] (21.2%), isoamyl acetate (16.4%)acetoin (5.7%)and some anethole (2.7%). An old male specimen from Yunnan showed the enormous olfactory contribution made by some 3-isobutyl-2-methoxypyrazine (0.01%, //earthy, bell-pepper-related//), a compound found at 87% in the headspace of Cycas circinalis. \\ 
 +[Scent of a vanishing flora, Roman Kaiser, 2011338-339
  
 ---- ----
  
-"[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycasin|Cycasin]], a new toxic glycoside, C8H16O7N2, has been isolated from the seeds of Japanese cycad, ion-exchange resins and active carbon chromatography being used. From the results of the examination of the decomposition products such as nitrogen gas, formaldehyde, and cyanide etc. and of the ultraviolet and infrared absorption spectra, its aglycone is considered to be identical with that of macrozamin from Australian cycad, reported by Lythgoe et al. It is found, however, that the sugar component of cycasin is one molecule of glucose, unlike that of macrozamin namely primeverose. Cycasin is, therefore, concluded to be a new compound, glucosyloxyazoxymethane." \\+"//Bark// boiled in water is used to wash burns." \\ 
 +[Medical ethnobotany of the Marma tribe of Bangladesh., Alam, M.K., Economic Botany, Vol.46(3), 1992, 330-335] 
 + 
 +"Skin infections. //Leaves// are crushed and applied to affected areas. Precautions: must not be applied too frequently." \\ 
 +[Ethnomedicinal survey of Bheramara area in Kushtia district, Bangladesh., Rahmatullah, M., Ferdausi, D., Mollik, M.A.H., Azam, M.N.K., Rahman, M.T., Jahan, R., American Eurasian Journal of Sustainable Agriculture, Vol.3(3), 2009, 534-541] 
 + 
 +"[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycasin|Cycasin]], a new toxic glycoside, C8H16O7N2, has been isolated from the //seeds// of Japanese cycad, ion-exchange resins and active carbon chromatography being used. From the results of the examination of the decomposition products such as nitrogen gas, formaldehyde, and cyanide etc. and of the ultraviolet and infrared absorption spectra, its aglycone is considered to be identical with that of macrozamin from Australian cycad, reported by Lythgoe et al. It is found, however, that the sugar component of cycasin is one molecule of glucose, unlike that of macrozamin namely primeverose. Cycasin is, therefore, concluded to be a new compound, glucosyloxyazoxymethane." \\
 [12. Studies On Cycasin, a New Toxic Glycoside, of Cycas revoluta Thunb: Part 1. Isolation and the Structure of Cycasin., Nishida, K., Kobayashi, A., Nagahama, T., Journal of the Agricultural Chemical Society of Japan, VOl.19(1), 1955, 77-84] [12. Studies On Cycasin, a New Toxic Glycoside, of Cycas revoluta Thunb: Part 1. Isolation and the Structure of Cycasin., Nishida, K., Kobayashi, A., Nagahama, T., Journal of the Agricultural Chemical Society of Japan, VOl.19(1), 1955, 77-84]
  
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 [LC–MS/MS determination of the isomeric neurotoxins BMAA (β-N-methylamino-l-alanine) and DAB (2, 4-diaminobutyric acid) in cyanobacteria and seeds of Cycas revoluta and Lathyrus latifolius., Krüger, T., Mönch, B., Oppenhäuser, S., Luckas, B., Toxicon, Vol.55(2), 2010, 547-557] [LC–MS/MS determination of the isomeric neurotoxins BMAA (β-N-methylamino-l-alanine) and DAB (2, 4-diaminobutyric acid) in cyanobacteria and seeds of Cycas revoluta and Lathyrus latifolius., Krüger, T., Mönch, B., Oppenhäuser, S., Luckas, B., Toxicon, Vol.55(2), 2010, 547-557]
  
-{{http://plantgenera.org/ILLUSTRATIONS_HD/9997.jpg?500}} \\ +{{:cycas_revoluta.jpg}} \\ 
-Curtis’s Botanical Magazine, vol. 57 [ser2vol. 4]: t. 2964 (1830) [W.JHooker\\ +Cycas revolutaFunchalMadeira, Portugal © Luis Miguel Bugallo Sánchez (Lmbuga) 
-[[http://plantgenera.org/species.php?id_species=302815]] +[[https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en|CC BY-SA 4.0]] [[https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2016_Cycas_revoluta._Funchal._Madeira._Portugal-111.jpg|Wikimedia Commons]]
cycas_revoluta_thunb.1423380416.txt.gz · Zuletzt geändert: 2015/02/08 07:26 von andreas

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