HELPMEFIND PLANTS COMMERCIAL NON-COMMERCIAL RESOURCES EVENTS PEOPLE RATINGS
|
|
'Rosa persica' rose Reviews & Comments
HelpMeFind's future is in your hands - Please do not take this unique resource for granted.
Your support of HelpMeFind is urgently needed. HelpMeFind, like all websites, needs funding to survive. We have set a premium-membership yearly subscription amount as low as possible to make user-community funding viable.
We are grateful to the many members who have signed up so far, but the number of premium-membership members remains too small for us to sustain the current support and development level. If you value HelpMeFind and want to see it continue we need your support too.
Yearly membership is only $2.00 per month and adds a host of additional features, and numerous planned enhancements, to take full advantage of the power and convenience of HelpMeFind. Click here to start your premium membership..
We of course also welcome donations of any amount. Click here to make a donation. Donations of $24 or more receive a thank-you gift of a 1-year premium membership.
As far as we have come, we feel HelpMeFind is still in its infancy. With your support we have so much more to accomplish.
-
-
Initial post
8 JAN 20 by
CybeRose
Journal-Chemical Society of Pakistan, 25(4):323-327 (Dec 2003) Polyphenolic antioxidant constituents of Rosa persica S. Zamanizadehnajarib
, S. Tahara
Abstract 2,2-Diphenyl-l-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radical scavenging TLC autographic assay guided fractionation of a butanolic fraction of an acetone extract of Rosa percica resulted in separation and identification of five known phenolic antioxidants for the first time. They are including three flavonoids: catechin (1), (+)-gallocatechin (2) and quercetin 3-0-β?-D- glucuronoside (3), and one condensed tannin: procyanidin B-3 (4), and one hydrolysable tannin: gallic acid 4-0-β-D-(6'-0-galloyl)-gIucopyranoside (5). The radical scavenging activity of 5 is determined by DPPH spectrophotometeric assay.
|
REPLY
|
-
-
Initial post
25 DEC 16 by
CybeRose
Flora Orientalis : sive, Enumeratio plantarum ... v.2 pp. 668-669, 1872.
HULTHEMlA (Dumort. Dissert. 1824). Lowea Lindl. Bot. Reg. — Rhodopsis Bunge in Ledeb. Fl. Alt. II, p. 224.
Calycis tubus globosus fauce constrictus, limbi quinquepartiti laciniae integerrimae. Petala quinque basi nectario maculaeformi obsita. Carpella glaberrima. — Frutex stipulis aculeiformibus, foliis simplicibus. Sententiae cl. et amic. a Bunge qui folium pro stipulis binis connatis habet ob ejus nervationem omnino normalem assentire nequeo.
1. H. berberifolia (Pall. Nov. Act. Petrop. X, p. 397, tab. 10, fig. 5 sub Rosa) fruticulosa humilis ramosissima, tota glabra vel breviter tomentella, aculeis omnibus stipularibus fere oppositis patentisubincurvis albis. foliis ovatis vel obovato-cuneatis subsessilibus obtiisis dentatis, floribus solitariis terminalibus, calycis tubo dense aculeato-hirto, laciniis oblongo-lanceolatis acutis dorso setosis persistentibus patentibus, petalis aureis basi atropurpureis 5. Ledeb. Ic. Ross. tab. 370. — Lowea berberifolia Lindl Bot. Reg. tab. 1261.
Hab. in sterilibus siccis interdum subsalsis Persiae occidentalis prope Assadabad et Haniudan (Haussk!), borealis in jugo Elbrusensi et planitiebus ad ejus meridiem sitis (Oliv! Auch. exs. 1428! Ky. exs. 698!). Fl. Apr. Jun.
Vix pedalis. Flores in genere minuti. Fructus avellana minor. β. Stenophylla.—Humilior, folia angustiora lineari-oblonga. Hab. ad Teheran (Ky. Exs. 26!). Ar. Geogr. Desertum Songaro-Khirghisicum.
|
REPLY
|
-
-
Initial post
19 DEC 16 by
CybeRose
On Buds and Stipules (1899) p. 188 Sir John Lubbock, Bart. M.P. The stem is prickly, and the frequent occurrence of the prickles, sometimes in pairs, at the base of the leaf has led to their description as stipules; for instance, by Boissier in his great ‘Flora Orientalis’
|
REPLY
|
-
-
Initial post
6 MAR 16 by
true-blue
Rosa persica (Ṯābeti: Hulthemia persica; Pers. varak), a low shrub (50-60 cm high), with a reddish brown macula at the base of the yellow petals of its simple flowers; habitat: the steppes of Azerbaijan, Hamadān, Qazvin, Tehran, Semnān and Dāmḡān, Gorgān, Khorasan, etc.; also found in Afghanistan (Herat) and Turkmenistan (Zieliński, p. 6; Ḵātamsāz, pp. 38-39).
http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/gol
|
REPLY
|
|
|