Subscribe to Newsletter for the Latest Information on Faerie News, Events, Releases

 

 

Email
Forum -Inc Events &Blog
Photos
Personalised Fairy Stories Personalised Santa Letters

Fairy Games
Fairies at the Theatre
Fairy Movies
UK Store


Fairies
Contacting Fairies
Fairy Folklore
Fairy Places
Fairy Sightings
Fairy Rings
Blood Sacrifices / Suicide
Nature Fairies
House Fairies
Guardian Fairies
Mischievous Fairies
Fairies of Omens
Fairy Animals
Dark Fairies
Other Fairies
Traditional Fairy Tales
Fairy Texts
Fairy Glossary
Herbs & Herbalism
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Fungus
Folklore & Superstitions
Crystals
Calendar
Articles
Links




Site Map . xml
Site Map Text

 

Jamaican Dogwood

Botanical Name

Piscidia piscipula

Family

Fabaceae

Other Names

Fish poison tree, Piscidia erythrina

Family

Leguminosae

Native to

Caribbean, South America, Texas, West Indies

Parts used

Stem bark

Actions

Analgesic, anodyne, antispasmodic, sedative

Constituents

Glycosides including piscidin,; flavonoids including sumatrol,  piscerythrone, rotenone; resin alkaloid

Isoflavones – lisetin, jamaicin, ichthyone, piscerythrone, piscidone and the rotenoids rotenone, milletone, isomilletone, sumatrol

Organic acids –piscidic fukiic acid and its 3’0 methyl ester

Beta sitosterol, tannins

Combines with

Hops, valerian, black haw

Nervous system

Insomnia, neuralgia, migraine

Other Uses

Fish poison