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Botany Photo of the Day
In science, beauty. In beauty, science. Daily.

Dichroa febrifuga

Dichroa febrifuga

It's been grey, cloudy, somewhat snowy and (relatively) cold for much of the past few weeks locally. Yesterday's photographic expedition into the garden centred on finding some colours other than grey, green or white. Today's image of the fruit of Dichroa febrifuga or Chinese quinine, certainly qualifies. To see the flowers, you can check out this previous BPotD entry.

Dichroa febrifuga is not well-known in Western cultivation, though it is one of “the fifty fundamental herbs” in Chinese medicine according to Duke and Ayensu's Medicinal Plants of China (via the Plants For a Future Database). Its common name of Chinese quinine hints at its antimalarial properties (quinine was used to treat malaria). However, the principal antimalarial alkaloid present in this plant, febrifugine, is far more toxic to parasites when compared with quinine. Unfortunately, this particular chemical also has more potent injurious side effects. Synthetic analogs to febrifugine are being researched to replicate the antimalarial benefits without causing other difficulties (see: Jiang et al. 2004. Antimalarial Activities and Therapeutic Properties of Febrifugine Analogs. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 49(3): 1169).

Botany resource link: Botany Online: The History of a Science (scroll down to table of contents) from the University of Hamburg's Botany Online program. The complete text is available only in German, but the first forty-five chapters have been translated into English.

3 Comments

Knox M. Henry commented:

Wow ! What intense colour ! What is its hardiness?

Beverley commented:

Dichroa febrifuga - Z7B - Heronswood Nursery Catalogue, Hinkley

Ron B commented:

I think rating it Zone 8, as has been done in FLORA - The Gardener's Bible (Global Publishing) is probably better. Not that FLORA is the epitome of factual accuracy, but Dan seems to rate things a Zone low. I think I've read in the catalog along the way the incorrect statement that Heronswood is in Zone 7, this would explain the repeatedly one-Zone-low ratings of the plants. (They have the same lows as me, here across the Sound from them; this whole area is Zone 8).

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