Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 2, No. 2, August 1929
Poison!
By F. Lyle Wynd
The False Green Hellebore (Veratrum
viride Ait.) is blooming in profusion on the camp ground at the Rim.
Its large green leaves cause tourists to frequently mistake it for skunk
cabbage.
The Hellebores have long been know to
be very poisonous. All parts of the plant are lethal. As far back as the
time of Pliny the deadly properties of this genus of plants were know.
Pliny himself tells us how oxen, horses, and swine were killed by eating
the foliage. On our own Pacific Coast, far from the time and place of
Pliny, there is considerable loss among foraging stock when the grazing
is short. The fine green leaves are very tempting to animals, although
it is rare that they will eat them unless pressed by hunger.
The number of poisonous substances in
the tissues of the Hellebores is very large indeed. Of these the
so-called "veratrin" having the chemical formulae C32H19NO11,
has a violent physiological effect. It causes severe sneezing and
dilates the pupils of the eyes. Recently this substance has been reduced
to several which were unknown to the earlier investigators. Of these the
base, "cevadin", is very toxic. "Veratridin" and "sabadillin" have also
been separated from the "veratrin" of the earlier writers. There have
been many other poisonous bases, alkaloids, and glucosides found in
these plants by toxicologists.
Most cased of poisoning from this plant
are due to over doses of the drug made from them.
The Indians used this plant as an
emitic.