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That's interesting. Most of my Colchicum damage is perpetrated by slugs.They(slugs) are immune to the colchicine that is poisonous to most other species.I've always been fascinated by the specificity of various toxins on one species and the toxin is ineffective on others.The issue as I understand it is that the toxin is not metabolized by the organism and passes though almost unnoticed.
There was a nature programme on TV here a few days ago where I was suprised to hear that bamboo contains cyanide and is very toxic although it is the main food source of a lemur species (and pandas, of course). Perhaps this is common knowledge but it had passed me by! Does heat remove the toxins which is why it appears in Chinese cuisine, or is that a specific, non-toxic species of bamboo?
Does heat remove the toxins which is why it appears in Chinese cuisine, or is that a specific, non-toxic species of bamboo?
This is the same Colchicum Kesselringii pot as above on the next day I never know this poisonous plants get pecked...
I'm also a bamboo eater, Steve We eat boiled very young sprouts of bamboo. See here: Bamboo shoot