trifolium pratense การใช้
- _Red clover ( Trifolium pratense ) : Contains blood thinners.
- One such species that is readily available in early spring is red clover ( " Trifolium pratense " ).
- It is a common fungal pathogen of red clover ( " Trifolium pratense " ) that causes black patch disease in the plant.
- John Gerard in his herbal of 1597 defined the shamrock as " Trifolium pratense " or " Trifolium pratense flore albo ", meaning Red or White Clover.
- John Gerard in his herbal of 1597 defined the shamrock as " Trifolium pratense " or " Trifolium pratense flore albo ", meaning Red or White Clover.
- :Trifolium repens discusses some of the culinary uses of that species; Trifolium pratense points out that this particular species does have estrogen-like compounds which makes it troublesome for some people.
- Threlkeld identifies the shamrock as White Field Clover ( " Trifolium pratense album " ) and comments rather acerbically on the custom of wearing the shamrock on St . Patrick's Day:
- It is similar in appearance to red clover, " Trifolium pratense ", but the leaflets are narrower and have no white markings and the narrow stipules are not bristle-pointed.
- This bee species is especially fond of one species in particular; " Trifolium pratense ", also known as red clover, is a popular food source in the diet of " Bombus hortorum ".
- The red clover ( " Trifolium pratense " ) was designated as the state insect the western honey bee ( " Apis mellifera " ), designated by Act 124 of the 1978 biennial session of the Vermont General Assembly.
- The Irish botanist Caleb Threlkeld, writing in 1726 in his work entitled " Synopsis Stirpium Hibernicarum " or " A Treatise on Native Irish Plants " followed Gerard in identifying the shamrock as " Trifolium pratense ", calling it White Field Clover.
- ""'Trifolium pratense " "', the "'red clover "', is a herbaceous species of flowering plant in the bean family Fabaceae, native to Europe, Western Asia and northwest Africa, but planted and naturalised in many other regions.
- The botanist Carl Linnaeus in his 1737 work " Flora Lapponica " identifies the shamrock as " Trifolium pratense ", mentioning it by name in a Latinised form " Chambroch ", with the following curious remark : " Hiberni suo Chambroch, quod est Trifolium pratense purpureum, aluntur, celeres & promtissimi roburis " ( The Irish call it shamrock, which is purple field clover, and which they eat to make them speedy and of nimble strength ).
- The botanist Carl Linnaeus in his 1737 work " Flora Lapponica " identifies the shamrock as " Trifolium pratense ", mentioning it by name in a Latinised form " Chambroch ", with the following curious remark : " Hiberni suo Chambroch, quod est Trifolium pratense purpureum, aluntur, celeres & promtissimi roburis " ( The Irish call it shamrock, which is purple field clover, and which they eat to make them speedy and of nimble strength ).
- The results show that there is no one " true " species of shamrock, but that " Trifolium dubium " ( Lesser clover ) is considered to be the shamrock by roughly half of Irish people, and " Trifolium repens " ( White clover ) by another third, with the remaining fifth split between " Trifolium pratense ", " Medicago lupulina ", " Oxalis acetosella " and various other species of " Trifolium " and " Oxalis ".