ricinus communis การใช้
- One of the foodplants of the larvae is " Ricinus communis ".
- It is extracted from the bean-like seeds of the castor plant, ricinus communis.
- Their caterpillars feed on Euphorbiaceae, Acalpha sp and Ricinus communis.
- The seeds of " Ricinus communis " are commonly crushed to extract castor oil.
- The larvae feed on " Ricinus communis ", rolling up the edge of a leaf.
- Larvae have been recorded on " Ricinus communis ".
- It is a major component of the seed oil obtained from mature Castor plant ( " Ricinus communis"
- The wingspan is 23 26 mm and their larvae feed on Euphorbiaceae ( " Ricinus communis " ).
- Numerous palm trees exist near the coasts, as well as tropical fruit trees and the palmacristi ( Ricinus communis)
- The castor bean plant, Ricinus communis, often shows up in garden catalogs as " wonder plant " or " mole plant ."
- Methanolic extracts of the leaves of " Ricinus communis " were used in antimicrobial testing against eight pathogenic bacteria in rats and showed antimicrobial properties.
- Accidental ingestion of " Ricinus communis " cake to be used as fertilizer has been reported to be responsible for fatal ricin poisoning in animals.
- The larvae of the recently described " Olepa schleini " are the only insects which regularly infest " Ricinus communis " in Israel and adjacent countries.
- Confusion with " Vitex " on the part of early settlers in the West Indies may have given to " Ricinus communis " the name " Castor-oil plant ".
- The word is not known to be used elsewhere and most references usually considers it to be a castor plant ( ricinus communis ) or a type of gourd.
- The genus " Ricinus ", including " Ricinus communis ", the castorbean, also exists in botany-this is possible, since name of animals and plants are ruled by different nomenclature codes.
- Leaves are lobed and large, while the white flowers occur in cymes, producing a spiny 3-seeded capsule with seeds rich in fats and proteins, resembling those of " Ricinus communis ".
- Toxalbumins notably are present in the plant families Leguminosae and Euphorbiaceae, occurring for instance in " Robinia pseudoacacia ", " Abrus precatorius ", " Jatropha curcas ", " Croton gratissimus " and " Ricinus communis ".
- Castor oil, the expressed natural fatty oil of the seeds of " Ricinus communis " also contains mixtures of the glycerides of isoricinoleic acids and much smaller traces of tristearin and the glyceride of dihydroxysteric acid.
- Fruits of the rubiaceous forest herb " Psychotria colorata " and seeds of " Ricinus communis ", a treelet of dooryard gardens, are used for baiting hooks and catching small fish : characins called " pirapisi ".
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