> HERBACEOUS
Autumn
crocus
Buttercup
Calabar
bean
C.
monkshood
Daffodil
Foxglove
Hemlock
Henbane
Jimsonweed
Lily
of the valley
Mandrake
Mexican
cactus
Oleander
Peony
Pheasants
eye
Poppy
Potato
Tobacco
> FRUTESCENT
Belladonna
Cannabis
Coca
> LIGNEOUS
Castor
oil plant
Poison
ivy
Quinine
tree
Strophanthus
Strychnos
Yew
> MISCELLANEOUS
Additional
plants

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A thousand years
later, Carl Linnaeus named that plant after this wonderful place. Actually
this plant is widespread on the meadows and grasslands in Europe and the
Middle East.
The autumn
crocus looks like an ordinary crocus, only it has pink-violet blossoms
and up to 30 cm long leaves.
It provoked interest even
in ancient times not only because it blooms in the autumn and its fruits
appear in the spring, in contrast to the other flowers. Four thousand years
ago it was already known to Egyptians, Indians, Greeks, and Arabians as
a quite successful but, unfortunately, dangerous means of treating gout
and rheumatism.
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All parts of the
plant are deadly poisonous. The toxic effects appear slowly and gradually
within 3 to 6 hours. These are nausea, excessive vomiting and bloody diarrhea,
abdominal pain, weak arrhythmic pulse, low body temperature, shortage of
breath and, eventually, death. The bulb of the plant contains the alkaloid
colchicin, which is still used in the treatment of gout. It is also used
in genetics because of its property to cause polyploidia. Colchicin pre-treatment
of seeds leads to numerous mutations of plants and is used for selective
purposes in agriculture.
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