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Poisonous Plants and Animals

 plants
Daffodil, Narcissus
Narcissus pseudonarcissus/poeticus

Many peple do not even suspect that this seemingly innocuous plant actually contains poisonous alkaloids!


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







According to ancient Greek mythology, once there was a handsome slender lad called Narcissus. Many beautiful nymphs were in love with him but he was haughty and rejected their love. One day, he saw his face in the clear water of a mountain brook and fell so deeply in love with his own reflection that he couldn’t leave that place any more. He died there and a beautiful flower–“the flower of death”–grew from the place where his head had dropped. Consequently, it was named after the self-enamored Narcissus. 
The daffodil is distributed mostly in the Mediterranean but has been cultivated as a decorative plant for ages all over the world.
mbleeker@euronet.nl
Narcissus pseudonarcissus major
The number of the varieties has already reached 12,000. Most people are familiar only with the aesthetic value of the daffodil and are completely unaware of the fact that these wonderful blossoms– yellow or white with a red brim–and the bulbs contain the poisonous alkaloids narcitine and narcicysteine. They have no application in modern medicine.