mercurialis การใช้
- The historical figure known as Mercurialis attended the Council of Rimini in 359 and died around 406.
- He has come to be venerated as "'Saint Mercurialis "', around which fanciful legends have sprung.
- They are most successful on slightly acid soils; the same niche in alkaline conditions may be occupied by other species such as " Mercurialis perennis ".
- Hieronymus Mercurialis, writing in the sixteenth century, proposed methods to redress the imbalance including changes in diet, reduced libido ( in men only ), and purging.
- For instance, the first bishop of the city of Forl? Saint Mercurialis, was said to have killed a dragon and saved Forl? so he is often depicted killing a dragon.
- A typical example would be dog's mercury ( " Mercurialis perennis " ), a plant slow to colonise new sites, but common in ancient woodland and old hedgerows.
- In studying the mulberry, he determined that female plants not near to male ( staminate ) plants produced fruit but with no seeds . " Mercurialis " and spinach plants fared likewise.
- Like other members of the family, this species has functional jaws and it feeds as an adult on pollen grains from a wide variety of plants such as " Mercurialis " and " Ranunculus ".
- The other work of Alexander's that is still extant is a short treatise,, " De Lumbricis ", which was first published in Greek and Latin by Hieronymus Mercurialis ( Venica 1570, 4to ).
- Apart from " Chenopodium bonus-henricus " and some other edible members of the Chenopodiaceae ( also known as mercuries ), the most similar-looking species is probably " Mercurialis annua ", annual mercury, which is also thought to be poisonous.
- For example, " Synchytrium decipiens " and " Syncytrium mercurialis " are limited to a single host species . " Synchytrium taraxci " is limited to the genus " Taraxacum " . " Synchytrium fulgens " is able to infect a variety of plants in the family Oenotheraceae.
- The Slough Burn still rises from the marshy area below the Broadhirst Woods, however the limestone quarry that served the limekilns is now abandoned, surviving as an area rich in wildlife, containing old woodland indicator plants such as Wood Anemone ( Anemone nemorosa ), Bluebell ( Hyacinthoides non-scripta ), Wood Sorrel ( Oxalis acetosella ), Dog's Mercury ( Mercurialis perennis ), Herb Robert ( Geranium robertianum ) and other species.
- Woodland plants such as wood sorrel, " Oxalis acetosella ", wood millet, " Milium effusum ", and dog's mercury, " Mercurialis perennis ", have established themselves in the shadier crevices, while rue-leaved saxifrage, " Saxifraga tridactylites ", shining cranesbill " Geranium lucidum ", and common whitlow grass, " Erophila verna ", occur in the most exposed situations.