Senecio ilicifolius is a plant endemic to South Africa and belonging to the family Asteraceae.
Senecio ilicifolius | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Clade: | Asterids |
Order: | Asterales |
Family: | Asteraceae |
Genus: | Senecio |
Species: | S. ilicifolius
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Binomial name | |
Senecio ilicifolius | |
Synonyms | |
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It is found in the Eastern and Western Cape growing up to 1 metre (3 ft 3 in) tall, and readily identified by its rigid holly-like leaves.[1] Its leaves are clasping, adnate and somewhat decurrent at the base, acute, sharply and coarsely toothed with revolute margins, glabrous and scabrous-dotted above, whitish felted below.[2]
Senecio species are a rich source of alkaloids and 'Meyler's Side Effects of Herbal Medicines' lists S. ilicifolius as producing pterophine and senecionine. Senecionine (C18H25O5N) is toxic and problematic for feed stock and human consumption, causing cirrhosis of the liver,[3] has a melting point of 232° and is only slightly soluble in water. It is not destroyed by the baking of bread from flour using contaminated wheat.[4][5][6]
In this short paper attention is called to a disease of human beings in South Africa which is attributed to Senecio poisoning; on account of the resemblance between it and the conditions found in domesticated animals and attributed to the same origin the matter is of special interest. In 1918 certain cases of sickness of obscure causation in the George district of the Cape Province were brought to the notice of the Union Government Health Department. Whole families had suffered from time to time from a complaint, the chief symptoms of which were abdominal pain and vomiting, with ascites. It was suggested that the disease was of dietetic origin and samples of meal and wheat that had been made into bread and eaten for some time by affected persons were examined. It was found that the plants known as Senecio ilicifolius and S. burchelli grow as weeds in the wheat fields at George, and that when the wheat is threshed the seeds and portions of these plants frequently remain behind and are sold with the wheat. When the old-fashioned system of milling, with incomplete winnowing, is adopted these seeds are also ground with the wheat grains into meal. The investigators had in mind similar diseases in stock which were regarded as having been conclusively associated with plants of the same species.
— Senecio Disease, or Cirrhosis of the Liver, Due to Senecio Poisoning. - Willmot, Frederick C.; Robertson, George W. - South African Medical Record 1920 Vol.18 No.18 pp.346-348 pp.
References
edit- ^ "Threatened Species Programme | SANBI Red List of South African Plants".
- ^ "Senecio ilicifolius in Global Plants".
- ^ D. Jesse Wagstaff (7 July 2008). International Poisonous Plants Checklist: An Evidence-Based Reference. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1420062526.
- ^ De Waal, H. L. (July–October 1940). "Senecio alkaloids. Part III. Chemical investigations upon the Senecio species responsible for "bread-poisoning". The isolation of senecionine from Senecio ilicifolius Thunb. And a new alkaloid "rosmarinine" from Senecio rosmarinifolius Linn". Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Science and Animal Industry. 15 (1, 2). hdl:2263/59471.
- ^ "Senecio disease, or cirrhosis of the liver, due to Senecio poisoning". South African Medical Journal. 18 (18): 346–348. September 1920.
- ^ D. G. Steyn (1933). "Poisoning of Human Beings by Weeds contained in Cereals (Bread Poisoning.)" (PDF). Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Science and Animal Industry. I (1).