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callicarpa_americana_l

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Callicarpa americana L. - Lamiaceae - American beauty berry, Amerikanische Schönbeere

Shrub, native to North America, Central America and the Caribbean, cultivated as ornamental.

„American beautyberries produce large clusters of purple berries, which birds and deer eat, thus distributing the seeds.“ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Callicarpa_americana

„Decades ago, the grandfather of one of the authors (C.T.B.), residing in northeast Mississippi, used fresh crushed American beautyberry (Callicarpa americana L., Verbenaceae) leaves as a topical treatment for draft animals to repel flies and other biting insects. Specifically, the repellent was used as crushed leaves on or off the stems and partially placed under the harness where the animal’s movement would continue to release the compound(s). Bioassay-guided fractionation of C. americana extracts using the yellow fever mosquito, Aedes aegypti, led to the isolation of alpha-humulene, humulene epoxide II, and intermedeol and a newly isolated terpenoid (callicarpenal)… Experiment 7 showed that callicarpenal, intermedeol, and spathulenol were as effective as SS-220 against A. stephensi and was the case with A. aegypti. Humulene epoxide II was not different from the control.“
[Isolation and identification of mosquito bite deterrent terpenoids from leaves of American (Callicarpa americana) and Japanese (Callicarpa japonica) beautyberry., Cantrell, C. L., Klun, J. A., Bryson, C. T., Kobaisy, M., Duke, S. O., Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, Vol.53(15), 2005, 5948-5953]

„Callicarpa americana L. has a number of documented ethnobotanical uses in North America and the berries have been used occasionally as a food. In the early nineteenth century Rafinesque noted that C. americana leaves were used to treat dropsy (apparently by people of European heritage), and the fruits were considered edible, although somewhat acidic and astringent (hence “sourberry”, a colloquial name at the time).
In a traditional practice of the Alabama Indian tribe in North America, a decoction was prepared from the roots and branches of C. americana L. for external use in sweat baths as an antirheumatic, diaphoretic, and febrifuge (against malaria specifically), and the Choctaw tribe used decoctions of various C. americana plant parts (including roots and berries) to treat colic.“
[Biologically active natural products of the genus Callicarpa., Jones, W. P., Kinghorn, A. D., Current bioactive compounds, Vol.4(1), 2008, 15] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2760847/

callicarpa_americana_l.1417693139.txt.gz · Zuletzt geändert: 2014/12/04 11:38 von andreas

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