Combretum Elegans
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Combretum Elegans
''Combretum rotundifolium'', the monkey brush or monkey brush vine, is a plant species in the genus '' Combretum'' found in South America. ''Combretum rotundifolium'' contains acidic dammarane arabinofuranoside Arabinose is an aldopentose – a monosaccharide containing five carbon atoms, and including an aldehyde (CHO) functional group. For biosynthetic reasons, most saccharides are almost always more abundant in nature as the "D"-form, or structurally ...s.Acidic dammarane arabinofuranosides from Combretum rotundifolium. C.B. Rogers, Phytochemistry, Volume 40, Issue 3, October 1995, Pages 833–836, The bright yellow/red flowers are the decoration of the interior where the color green is in abu. When in blossom the flower buds will slowly burst open giving this exotic vine its 'monkey brush' appearance. References * Cambess. Fl. Bras. Merid. (quarto ed.) 2(17): 247, pl. 129 1829 830 External links rotundifolium Plants described in 1792 {{Myrtales-stub it is ...
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Louis Claude Marie Richard
Louis Claude Marie Richard (19 September 1754 – 6 June 1821) was a French botanist and botanical illustrator. Richard was born at Versailles. Between 1781 and 1789 he collected botanical specimens in Central America and the West Indies. On his return he became a professor at the École de médecine in Paris. His books included ''Demonstrations botaniques'' (1808), ''De Orchideis europaeis'' (1817), ''Commentatio botanica de Conifereis et Cycadeis'' (1826) and ''De Musaceis commentatio botanica'' (1831). He gave us the special description terminology for the orchids, such as pollinium and gynostemium. The genus ''Richardia'' Kunth, (Araceae) was named in his honor. It is now a synonym of the genus ''Zantedeschia'' . This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation when citing a botanical name. His son was another notable botanist, Achille Richard. He also discovered Morgat in the 1880s. Eponyms A species of Caribbean lizard, ''Anolis richardii'', is named in honor of ...
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Combretum
''Combretum'', the bushwillows or combretums, make up the type genus of the family Combretaceae. The genus comprises about 272 species of trees and shrubs, most of which are native to tropical and southern Africa, about 5 to Madagascar, but there are others that are native to tropical Asia, New Guinea and the Bismarck Archipelago, Australia, and tropical America. Though somewhat reminiscent of willows (''Salix'') in their habitus, they are not particularly close relatives of these. Ecology Bushwillow trees often are important plants in their habitat. Savannahs in Africa, in particular those growing on granitic soils, are often dominated by ''Combretum'' and its close relative ''Terminalia''. For example, ''C. apiculatum'' is a notable tree in the Angolan mopane woodlands ecoregion in the Kunene River basin in southern Africa. Other species of this genus are a major component of Southwestern Amazonian moist forests. This genus contains several species that are pollinated by ma ...
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Dammarane
Dammarane is a tetracyclic triterpene found in sapogenins (forming triterpenoid saponins) like those of ginseng (ginsenosides: panaxatriol and protopanaxadiol). Compounds of the series were first isolated from and named after dammar resin, a natural resin from tropical trees of the Dipterocarp family. Mills J.S. (1956) "The Constitution of the Neutral, Tetracyclic Triterpenes of Dammar Resin" ''Journal of the Chemical Society'' 2196-2202 References External links Numbering of dammarane according to IUPAC Recommendations
Steroids Triterpenes {{steroid-stub ...
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Arabinofuranoside
Arabinose is an aldopentose – a monosaccharide containing five carbon atoms, and including an aldehyde (CHO) functional group. For biosynthetic reasons, most saccharides are almost always more abundant in nature as the "D"-form, or structurally analogous to D-glyceraldehyde.The D/L nomenclature does not refer to the molecule's optical rotation properties but to its structural analogy to glyceraldehyde. However, L-arabinose is in fact more common than D-arabinose in nature and is found in nature as a component of biopolymers such as hemicellulose and pectin. The L-arabinose operon, also known as the araBAD operon, has been the subject of much biomolecular research. The operon directs the catabolism of arabinose in ''E. coli'', and it is dynamically activated in the presence of arabinose and the absence of glucose. A classic method for the organic synthesis of arabinose from glucose is the Wohl degradation. : Etymology Arabinose gets its name from gum arabic, from which ...
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