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Coriaria myrtifolia

Coriaria myrtifolia, called in English redoul, is a shrub that grows to 2–3 m tall. Myrtifolia means myrtle-like leaves.

Coriaria myrtifolia
Leaves and mature fruits in July
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Cucurbitales
Family: Coriariaceae
Genus: Coriaria
Species:
C. myrtifolia
Binomial name
Coriaria myrtifolia
Synonyms
  • Coriaria hermaphrodita Turra
  • Coriaria tinctoria Dulac
Coriaria myrtifolia - MHNT

The fruit is a fleshy black berry achene slightly similar to a blackberry but toxic. Coriaria myrtifolia has the largest fruits in the genus Coriaria.[1] It is especially dangerous for children, who may eat it if they confuse it with edible berries. It should be recognized as one of the most neurotoxic plants in the western Mediterranean area.[2]

Range edit

Geographically, this species is confined to northern Mediterranean coastal Spain and Southern France (from the Gironde to the Alpes Maritimes), penetrating into Italy as far as part of the Apennines. The species reappears in the western Rif and Algeria, and in the Balearic islands it appears only in Ibiza.[3] The oldest known mention of this plant, dating from 932, is in a place name and implies its presence in the County of Manresa, north-west of Barcelona.[4]

In all this range, this plant plays an important role in preventing soil erosion and serves as understory vegetation. It is extraordinarily abundant in the less dense woodlands of the Spanish provinces of Girona and Barcelona (eastern part) at altitudes of 200–600 m, reaching occasionally to 1,000 m.[3]

Name edit

The Spanish name emborrachacabras (i.e. makes goats drunk) refers to the leaves' intoxicating effect on goats that eat them. The French name is Corroyère à feuilles de myrte. The Occitan name (rodor) and Catalan name (roldor) derive from Latin Rhus tyrius (Rhus coriaria), referring to the leaves' use in the traditional tannery industry. In Morocco, it's called arwaz (أرواز) in Berber as well as the spoken Moroccan Arabic.[5]

Description edit

 
A flowering plant (Castelltallat)

The root nodules of this plant carry out symbiotic nitrogen fixation,[6] Coriaria myrtifolia is one of the 13 Coriaria species known to bear actinorhizae.[7]

The redoul is a shrub with branches greyish square section. The leaves are sessile, mostly opposite but sometimes in groups of three or more, oblong, acuminate, with three ribs. The small greenish flowers, which appear from April to June in racemes, have five reddish highlights styles, five sepals and five petals, with ten stamens. The black fruits are formed of five fleshy carpels, each containing one seed.

Toxicity edit

The leaves and fruits of Coriaria myrtifolia contain coriamyrtin, a typical convulsant substance[8] one member of picrotoxane sesquiterpenes, was first isolated in 1864.[9]

Toxic effects are characterized by digestive (nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain), neurological (obnubilation, convulsions and their complications), and respiratory disorders (polypnea, respiratory problems, apnea, short and superficial respiration) together with myositis of the pupils. Treatment of this poisoning is purely symptomatic. In the case of convulsions, rapid resuscitation in an intensive care unit is necessary. Coriamyrtin also has a pharmacological action.[10]

The honeydew from redoul is also toxic.[11]

Uses edit

Traditionally, leaves of redoul were intensively collected for their tannin content, for tanning and dyeing purposes. During the medieval period, ecclesiastical institutions and the aristocracy clearly sought to establish some royalties on this resource, the samples are being especially on the distribution and sale of material first. These uses are due to the wealth of Coriaria spp tannin, particularly concentrated in the root and the bark of the stem, but also present in leaves, where they coexist with yellow dyes from the chemical group of flavonoids. These tannins are part of the group of hydrolyzable tannins, such as gall tannins. The chemical composition of redoul thus makes a tanning substance, capable of transforming recently flayed animal skins into leather, which is rot resistant, flexible and relatively impermeable, known as Basil leather.[12] These properties allow for its widespread use in many industries. Moreover, the well-known chemical reaction of tannins with iron salts, producing black precipitates, is the basis for the manufacture of some inks used since the Middle Ages, and is also used to dye a variety of textiles black or gray. Until the mid-fourteenth century, the material was the subject of extensive trade between the north of Catalonia and Languedoc.[13] The Māori used species of Coriaria from New Zealand: they produced traditional tattoo inks from the fruit juice, made musical instruments from the hollow stems, and despite its extreme toxicity ate the fruit sparingly due to its sweet taste; using it to sweeten drinking water or jellies made from seaweed.[14]

Coriaria myrtifolia is also used as an ornamental plant.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ Tobe, Hiroshi; Suzuki, Mitsuo; Fukuhara, Tatsundo (1992). "Pericarp anatomy and evolution inCoriaria (Coriariaceae)". The Botanical Magazine Tokyo. 105 (2): 289–302. doi:10.1007/BF02489422. S2CID 33868678.
  2. ^ Pommier, Philip (November 2005). "Poisoning by Coriaria myrtifolia Linnaeus: A new case report and review of the literature". Toxicon. 46 (6): 600–603. doi:10.1016/j.toxicon.2005.06.026. PMID 16165183.
  3. ^ a b Montserrat, Pedro (1958). "Root Nodules of Coriaria". Nature. 182 (4633): 475. Bibcode:1958Natur.182..475M. doi:10.1038/182475a0. S2CID 4251802.
  4. ^ « In comitatum Manresa, in terminio de Kastro Rosetorium... », F. Udina Martorell, El Archivo condal de Barcelona en los siglos ix-x. Estudio crítico de sus fondos, Barcelona, 1951, p. 204, § 104.
  5. ^ Mohamed Chafik. الدارجة المغربية، مجال توارد بين الأمازيغية و العربية. p. 45.
  6. ^ Bond, G. (1962). "Fixation of Nitrogen in Coriaria myrtifolia". Nature. 193 (4820): 1103–1104. Bibcode:1962Natur.193.1103B. doi:10.1038/1931103a0. S2CID 4158931.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-04-04. Retrieved 2011-01-31.
  8. ^ E. SWANSON, EDWARD (August 1936). "pharmacology". The Pharmacological Action of Coriamyrtin. 57 (4): 410–418. Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  9. ^ Tanaka, Kiyoshi (September 1982). "Stereocontrolled total synthesis of (.+-.)-coriamyrtin". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 57 (4): 410–418. doi:10.1021/ja00382a047.
  10. ^ Skalli, S; David, JM; Benkirane, R; Zaid, A; Soulaymani, R (October 2002). "[Acute intoxication by redoul (Coriaria myrtifolia L.). Three observations]". Presse Med. 31 (33): 1554–6. PMID 12422481.
  11. ^ Vieitez, Ernesto (1950). "Palynological Observations on Some Spanish Honeys". Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. 77 (6): 495–502. doi:10.2307/2482183. JSTOR 2482183.
  12. ^ "Basane.fr - Basil - History".
  13. ^ Cardon, Dominique; Pinto, Anthony (December 2007). "Le redoul, herbe des tanneurs et des teinturiers. Collecte, commercialisation et utilisations d'une plante sauvage dans l'espace méridional (xiiie-xve siècles)". Médiévales. Langues, Textes, Histoire (53): 51–64. doi:10.4000/medievales.3443.
  14. ^ Wilson & Wilkins (1911). "The Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics vol. 2". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  15. ^ "El sector de la planta ornamental en la Península Ibérica" (PDF).

coriaria, myrtifolia, called, english, redoul, shrub, that, grows, tall, myrtifolia, means, myrtle, like, leaves, leaves, mature, fruits, july, scientific, classification, kingdom, plantae, clade, tracheophytes, clade, angiosperms, clade, eudicots, clade, rosi. Coriaria myrtifolia called in English redoul is a shrub that grows to 2 3 m tall Myrtifolia means myrtle like leaves Coriaria myrtifolia Leaves and mature fruits in July Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Eudicots Clade Rosids Order Cucurbitales Family Coriariaceae Genus Coriaria Species C myrtifolia Binomial name Coriaria myrtifoliaL Synonyms Coriaria hermaphrodita Turra Coriaria tinctoria Dulac Coriaria myrtifolia MHNT The fruit is a fleshy black berry achene slightly similar to a blackberry but toxic Coriaria myrtifolia has the largest fruits in the genus Coriaria 1 It is especially dangerous for children who may eat it if they confuse it with edible berries It should be recognized as one of the most neurotoxic plants in the western Mediterranean area 2 Contents 1 Range 2 Name 3 Description 4 Toxicity 5 Uses 6 ReferencesRange editGeographically this species is confined to northern Mediterranean coastal Spain and Southern France from the Gironde to the Alpes Maritimes penetrating into Italy as far as part of the Apennines The species reappears in the western Rif and Algeria and in the Balearic islands it appears only in Ibiza 3 The oldest known mention of this plant dating from 932 is in a place name and implies its presence in the County of Manresa north west of Barcelona 4 In all this range this plant plays an important role in preventing soil erosion and serves as understory vegetation It is extraordinarily abundant in the less dense woodlands of the Spanish provinces of Girona and Barcelona eastern part at altitudes of 200 600 m reaching occasionally to 1 000 m 3 Name editThe Spanish name emborrachacabras i e makes goats drunk refers to the leaves intoxicating effect on goats that eat them The French name is Corroyere a feuilles de myrte The Occitan name rodor and Catalan name roldor derive from Latin Rhus tyrius Rhus coriaria referring to the leaves use in the traditional tannery industry In Morocco it s called arwaz أرواز in Berber as well as the spoken Moroccan Arabic 5 Description edit nbsp A flowering plant Castelltallat The root nodules of this plant carry out symbiotic nitrogen fixation 6 Coriaria myrtifolia is one of the 13 Coriaria species known to bear actinorhizae 7 The redoul is a shrub with branches greyish square section The leaves are sessile mostly opposite but sometimes in groups of three or more oblong acuminate with three ribs The small greenish flowers which appear from April to June in racemes have five reddish highlights styles five sepals and five petals with ten stamens The black fruits are formed of five fleshy carpels each containing one seed Toxicity editThe leaves and fruits of Coriaria myrtifolia contain coriamyrtin a typical convulsant substance 8 one member of picrotoxane sesquiterpenes was first isolated in 1864 9 Toxic effects are characterized by digestive nausea vomiting abdominal pain neurological obnubilation convulsions and their complications and respiratory disorders polypnea respiratory problems apnea short and superficial respiration together with myositis of the pupils Treatment of this poisoning is purely symptomatic In the case of convulsions rapid resuscitation in an intensive care unit is necessary Coriamyrtin also has a pharmacological action 10 The honeydew from redoul is also toxic 11 Uses editTraditionally leaves of redoul were intensively collected for their tannin content for tanning and dyeing purposes During the medieval period ecclesiastical institutions and the aristocracy clearly sought to establish some royalties on this resource the samples are being especially on the distribution and sale of material first These uses are due to the wealth of Coriaria spp tannin particularly concentrated in the root and the bark of the stem but also present in leaves where they coexist with yellow dyes from the chemical group of flavonoids These tannins are part of the group of hydrolyzable tannins such as gall tannins The chemical composition of redoul thus makes a tanning substance capable of transforming recently flayed animal skins into leather which is rot resistant flexible and relatively impermeable known as Basil leather 12 These properties allow for its widespread use in many industries Moreover the well known chemical reaction of tannins with iron salts producing black precipitates is the basis for the manufacture of some inks used since the Middle Ages and is also used to dye a variety of textiles black or gray Until the mid fourteenth century the material was the subject of extensive trade between the north of Catalonia and Languedoc 13 The Maori used species of Coriaria from New Zealand they produced traditional tattoo inks from the fruit juice made musical instruments from the hollow stems and despite its extreme toxicity ate the fruit sparingly due to its sweet taste using it to sweeten drinking water or jellies made from seaweed 14 Coriaria myrtifolia is also used as an ornamental plant 15 References edit Tobe Hiroshi Suzuki Mitsuo Fukuhara Tatsundo 1992 Pericarp anatomy and evolution inCoriaria Coriariaceae The Botanical Magazine Tokyo 105 2 289 302 doi 10 1007 BF02489422 S2CID 33868678 Pommier Philip November 2005 Poisoning by Coriaria myrtifolia Linnaeus A new case report and review of the literature Toxicon 46 6 600 603 doi 10 1016 j toxicon 2005 06 026 PMID 16165183 a b Montserrat Pedro 1958 Root Nodules of Coriaria Nature 182 4633 475 Bibcode 1958Natur 182 475M doi 10 1038 182475a0 S2CID 4251802 In comitatum Manresa in terminio de Kastro Rosetorium F Udina Martorell El Archivo condal de Barcelona en los siglos ix x Estudio critico de sus fondos Barcelona 1951 p 204 104 Mohamed Chafik الدارجة المغربية مجال توارد بين الأمازيغية و العربية p 45 Bond G 1962 Fixation of Nitrogen in Coriaria myrtifolia Nature 193 4820 1103 1104 Bibcode 1962Natur 193 1103B doi 10 1038 1931103a0 S2CID 4158931 CSA Archived from the original on 2012 04 04 Retrieved 2011 01 31 E SWANSON EDWARD August 1936 pharmacology The Pharmacological Action of Coriamyrtin 57 4 410 418 Retrieved 19 September 2013 Tanaka Kiyoshi September 1982 Stereocontrolled total synthesis of coriamyrtin Journal of the American Chemical Society 57 4 410 418 doi 10 1021 ja00382a047 Skalli S David JM Benkirane R Zaid A Soulaymani R October 2002 Acute intoxication by redoul Coriaria myrtifolia L Three observations Presse Med 31 33 1554 6 PMID 12422481 Vieitez Ernesto 1950 Palynological Observations on Some Spanish Honeys Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 77 6 495 502 doi 10 2307 2482183 JSTOR 2482183 Basane fr Basil History Cardon Dominique Pinto Anthony December 2007 Le redoul herbe des tanneurs et des teinturiers Collecte commercialisation et utilisations d une plante sauvage dans l espace meridional xiiie xve siecles Medievales Langues Textes Histoire 53 51 64 doi 10 4000 medievales 3443 Wilson amp Wilkins 1911 The Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics vol 2 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help El sector de la planta ornamental en la Peninsula Iberica PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coriaria myrtifolia amp oldid 1189239566, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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