Artemisia absinthium (leaf)

From AHPA Botanical Identity References Compendium
Revision as of 20:38, 14 March 2014 by Admin (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search


Contents

Nomenclature

Artemisia absinthium L.   Asteraceae  
Standardized common name (English): wormwood

Botanical Voucher Specimen

Artemisia absinthium - Tropicos.org (Cerrate, Emma - 3810) 

Reference see Tropicos.org. Missouri Botanical Garden. 06 Aug 2013 <http://www.tropicos.org/Image/100158913>

Source: MOBOT, Tropicos.org [1]

TropicosLogo.gif
(thumbnail)
Artemisia absinthium - Tropicos.org (Cerrate, Emma - 3810)

Organoleptic Characteristics

Macroscopic Characteristics

Microscopic Characteristics

Wormwood (leafy tops) (Absinthium vulgare Lam., Compositae.)The most distinctive tissue elements are the very abundant T-shaped, rather thin-walled trichromes with three to four basal cells; the rather large, yellowish, sessile, glandular trichromes with several vertical tiers of cells, are also quite diagnostic some pollen grains presenting the characteristics of the pollen of the order Compositae will generally be found. The vertical walls of the epidermal cells are wavy or sinuate and the stomata are abundant and fairly large.

Compare with Achillea and insect powder which are similar in certain of the histological characteristics.

Source: Schneider, A. (1921) The Microanalysis of Powdered Vegetable Drugs, 2nd ed. [2]

Microanalysis powdered vegetable p 200 google ver absinthium figure.png


T-shaped trichromes with three to four basal cells in 400X Acidified chloral Hydrate Soln.The most distinctive tissue elements are the very abundant T-shaped, rather thin-walled trichromes with three to four basal cells, as well as the strap-shaped tubular covering trichomes when observed at 400X with Acidified chloral Hydrate Soln.

Source: Elan M. Sudberg, Alkemist Laboratories [3]

AP-LOGO-Laboratories Crop - Copy.jpg
Artemisia absinthium L. -Asteraceae--1.jpg


High Performance Thin Layer Chromatographic Identification

Supplementary Information

Sources

  1. MOBOT, Tropicos.org http://www.tropicos.org/Image/100158913
  2. Schneider, A. (1921) The Microanalysis of Powdered Vegetable Drugs, 2nd ed.
  3. Elan M. Sudberg, Alkemist Laboratories
Personal tools
MediaWiki Appliance - Powered by TurnKey Linux