Aconitum lycoctonum: Difference between revisions

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== Uses ==
== Uses ==
WOLFSBANE. Middle and northern Europe. The root is collected in Lapland and boiled for food. This species, says Masters in the Treasury of Botany, does not possess such virulent properties as others. [[Aconitum (Sturtevant, 1919)#Aconitum lycoctonum|Sturtevant, ''Notes on edible plants'', 1919]].
{{Citation box
|text=WOLFSBANE. Middle and northern Europe. The root is collected in Lapland and boiled for food. This species, says Masters in the Treasury of Botany, does not possess such virulent properties as others.  
<references/>
<references/>
|author =[[Aconitum (Sturtevant, 1919)#Aconitum lycoctonum|Sturtevant, ''Notes on edible plants'', 1919]].
}}


== References ==
== References ==

Latest revision as of 08:57, 20 June 2020

Aconitum lycoctonum

alt=Description of None50x50.jpg picture.
Order [[]]
Family [[]]
Genus [[]]

2n =

Origin : area of origin

wild or cultivated


Uses summary


Description

Popular names

Classification

Cultivars

History

Uses

WOLFSBANE. Middle and northern Europe. The root is collected in Lapland and boiled for food. This species, says Masters in the Treasury of Botany, does not possess such virulent properties as others.


References

Links