#Desmodium

20 posts loaded — scroll for more

Link
oaresearchpaper
oaresearchpaper

Evaluating cover crop ecosystem services for buffering coffee against changing climate

Evaluating cover crop ecosystem services for buffering coffee against changing climate
zenodo.org
Text
mierbe
mierbe

DESMODIUM ARCANGEA – Il supporto naturale per fegato e respiro

Da secoli, il Desmodium adscendens accompagna le popolazioni dell’Africa, dell’America del Sud e delle isole del Pacifico come pianta di sostegno e protezione naturale. Oggi, questa preziosa tradizione botanica rivive in Desmodium Arcangea, un integratore pensato per favorire il benessere quotidiano dell’organismo.

Perché scegliere il Desmodium?
Le parti aeree della pianta sono naturalmente ricche di:

  • Flavonoidi (desmodina, vitexina, isovitexina) ad azione antiossidante
  • Alcaloidi indolici, utili al normale equilibrio delle funzioni epatiche
  • Sali minerali (potassio, magnesio, calcio)
  • Aminoacidi e saponine, coinvolti nei fisiologici processi di depurazione

Ideale nei periodi di:

  • cambi di stagione
  • stress fisico o metabolico
  • alimentazione irregolare
  • affaticamento epatico
  • necessità di una depurazione naturale

Integratore alimentare a base di Desmodium adscendens, formulato per coadiuvare le fisiologiche funzioni epatiche e respiratorie.

Acquista ora e prenditi cura del tuo equilibrio naturale

https://www.erboristeriarcobaleno.it/prodotto/desmodium-arcangea-60-compresse/

#erboristeria_arcobaleno_schio #Desmodium #BenessereNaturale #FegatoSano #DepurazioneNaturale #Fitoterapia #IntegratoriNaturali #SaluteEpatiche #Respirazione #EquilibrioMetabolico #Arcangea #Naturale

Text
jaikogoda
jaikogoda
Text
faguscarolinensis
faguscarolinensis

Desmodium glabellum / Tall Ticktrefoil at the Sarah P. Duke Gardens at Duke University in Durham, NC

Text
faguscarolinensis
faguscarolinensis

Desmodium rotundifolium / Round-Leaved Trailing Ticktrefoil at the Sarah P. Duke Gardens at Duke University in Durham, NC

Text
faguscarolinensis
faguscarolinensis

Desmodium rotundifolium / Round-Leaved Trailing Ticktrefoil at the Sarah P. Duke Gardens at Duke University in Durham, NC

Photo
seedlingimage
seedlingimage

Grona varians

Cotyledons and First true leaves

Image taken 20 days after seed scarified and plated on water agar and incubated at 20C and 13 days after potted in soil.

photo
Photo
seedlingimage
seedlingimage

Grona varians

Cotyledons

Image taken 8 days after seed scarified and plated on water agar and incubated at 20C.

photo
Photo
bonusdragons
bonusdragons

May 17, 2021:

Camo Secondary, Skydancer, Koi.

Simbi of desmodium’s clan!

photo
Text
deathtek
deathtek

9/10/19

Photo
cedar-glade
cedar-glade

Desmodium canescens

Hoary tick trefoil

at Huffman Prairie

photo
Text
kog0ruhn
kog0ruhn

Lair Review: Desmodium (302820)

This has been a long time coming because I’ve been having the hardest time concentrating, and for that, I am sorry. I have literally had the thumbnails for my choices sitting here in my review folder for twenty-one days.

image

That said, the fact that I’ve taken so long is all the more reason for me to forego the Top 5 request you sent and bulk that shit up to a top ten because goddamn son, your lair is smokin’. You have some of the most vivid, unique, varied dragons I’ve seen with some of the cleverest apparel combos, beautiful color combinations, and in-your-face personalities that I have ever seen. Diversity is the spice of life and your lair needs a menu warning because it’s up there with the Carolina Reaper.

Also, I’m doing this for free because I am an asshole.

[[MORE]]
image

Lyani was the first dragon in my lair that I selected, a nice and sleek astronomer with a mystical, ethereal vibe that just draws her to my attention. I’m typically not a huge fan of dragons who are too “flat” in terms of color, but in the case of Lyani, it pays off in spades. How her skin and her apparel match up is absolutely divine, and the lighter blues of her grasp match up majestically with her Lightning eyes. Everything about her is soft and “deep” looking, bringing to mind staring into deep water or blank twilight skies, and she’s simultaneously unnerving and relaxing to look at. I always feel like picking a dragon off the first row is cheating, but this lady is right in the spotlight where she needs to be.

image

Ripley is unique in a lot of ways, with touches here and there that immediately make him an attention grabber. Firstly, he rocks those flowing silks and that gown way better than I ever thought such a bulky dragon would, with a soft and elegant touch that just screams sophistication. His accent, being more bluish-green, helps tie together his bright Wind eyes with his more watery/shadowy colors, and I love his smoke gene (which I never thought I’d say about a dragon) and how it seems to glow and build from said accent. All and all, he’s probably my favorite, fullstop, and I hope he keeps being amazing in your lair.

image

Mesarthim is a walking dragon kaleidoscope, with beautiful natural colors and flowing genes that are complemented by his apparel and accent. Typically, I’d find such a dragon cluttered, but for whatever reason everything just seems so appropriately chaotic. The color coordination is on point, and the use of the more primastic touches help tie in colors on his apparel that just otherwise wouldn’t give, and help the purple of his shardhide and sage apparel clash less obviously with his darker blues. The layering is actually impressively done, and I like how you’ve managed to make it look like the shadhide and crystalhide are one and the same, extensions of his being that taper off and meld into his accent.

image

I was hesitant to pick Valeraine because she’s in your Hibernal Den, in a section marked “Guest Rooms.” I figured that meant that you were holding her for somebody or she was a traveling dragon (addendum after this was originally written: She’s still there 20 days later so I guess she’s a permanent fixture??), but I can’t not pick something so beautiful. First of all, you have managed to use ringlets in a way that isn’t obnoxious, and have utilized her apparel to cover up more problematic areas in a way that made me bewildered about how she was using Shining Peacock Feathers as an accent. Her colors are gorgeous, he genes are beautiful, her apparel is elegant, and she has a beautiful but cutting appearance that makes me think femme fatale

image

SommerRegen is another Hibernal Den dragon I couldn’t pass up, with beautiful colors, genes, and a lot of personality in a tiny package. I’m usually no fan of just cramming festival apparel on a dragon and then calling it a day, but I have not seen it look so cohesive on a dragon before. This is helped entirely by the stained glass appearance of her Bee gene and her beautiful secondary and tertiary gene, with a nice, dark primary to help colors pop. I’m also a huge fan of the little corn snake peeking out just above her scarf, and the layering of her mask and lantern so that there seems to be more wisps that usual emanating from the lantern itself. It’s a nice way to detract from the normally weird way the smoke from the mask typically curls around the wing.

image

Azar is fuckin’ gorgeous. This is despite his troublesome tertiary color which, honestly, I’m surprised you made such good use of. He now has a bit of the same color scheme as the haunted flame candles, only subtle enough to not detract from the beautiful, night sky aesthetic that he has going on. The wisps of black from his hand/feet apparel add an air of etherealism to him, and I cannot think of a more fitting dragon to wear that accent than this beautiful boy with his perfectly matching midnight starmap.

image

I… don’t remember Elif from my first sweep through your lair, but when I was going through for five extra to add, she immediately stood out. That filigree with that accent and those cyan NoN apparel bits? That is absolutely spot-on. I love how her tert flows into the blues of her accent and, with the aquatic aesthetic she has going, the smoke from her feet just seems to be whorls of water floating up from beneath her toes. The gold chains of her jewelry add enough warmth to detract away from the reds in her filigree, and all in all she’s a beauty to look at.

image

Iseya is a simple dragon, but I got an appreciation for simple as much as I have an appreciation for snappers. First of all, I love the fact she’s simple; the single mantle keeps her from looking bare while, at the same time, not covering up her tertiary or her accent. The accent itself is adorable and matches surprisingly well with her noxtide, and gives her firefly gene a bit of life that firefly usually lacks. Essentially, it looks like those beautiful little bugs are interacting with the succulents themselves and that is just straight-up adorable. She’s just such a happy, cute, and calming dragon to look at, and well-thought-out to boot.

image

Rashad is a boy that I wanted to pick for my original Top 5, but he didn’t make the cut against SommerRegen. Now that I have the chance to include him, holy smokes is this guy a beaut. Everything about him is just so perfectly laid out, from the coordination of his colors to helping integrate his accent into the rest of him with the use of the amber NotN apparel, which shares the same vividness. The Crystalcourt apparel looks like it was made with this dragon in mind, and that ghost gene? Everyone loves a good ghost gene, and the blueish tint (rather than the more neutral colors folks lean toward) was a wonderful choice for him (I say like you picked the color, but you know what I mean… I hope).

image

And last and not least is Hades who I, well, I’m honestly surprised I like as much as I do. I’m usually not a fan of busy dragons and this guy keeps your eyes going constantly from nose to tail tip. I think what won me over is just how freakin’ fantastic that accent looks on him, how the colors and the patterning add to his lionfish gene and natural patterning/coloration instead of detracting. There’s no need to cover up problem areas because it all creates this wonderful pattern that brings to mind polished, striated stone. And considering his name is Hades, that’s very suiting. Ghostly colors like a king of the underworld should have, and a nice, mineral look to coincide with the fact the mythological figure governed precious stones and mineral wealth as well. He’s a great dragon!

Text
sofibio-blog
sofibio-blog

LES PERTURBATEURS ENDROCRINIENS : UNE MENACE PERMANENTE

LES PERTURBATEURS ENDROCRINIENS : UNE MENACE PERMANENTE

La forte augmentation de la production mondiale de substances chimiques est responsable d’une exposition croissante de notre organisme aux toxiques. Une étude alarmante réalisée en France sur 43 enfants a récemment révélé la présence en moyenne de 34 molécules polluantes dont 23 perturbateurs endocriniens sur les cheveux de chaque enfant. Qu’est-ce que les perturbateurs endocriniens et où les…

View On WordPress

Text
projectchampionz
projectchampionz

The Effect Of Ethanol Extract Of Desmodium Velutinum Stem On Some Marker Emzyme In Liver Of Albino Wistar Rats

The Effect Of Ethanol Extract Of Desmodium Velutinum Stem On Some Marker Emzyme In Liver Of Albino Wistar Rats

This Research Work is on The Effect Of Ethanol Extract Of Desmodium Velutinum Stem On Some Marker Emzyme In Liver Of Albino Wistar Rats

Abstract

Present investigations were carried out on the effect of ethanol extract of Desmodium velutinum stem on some liver enzymes of albino wistar rats fed with high fat from cow‟s brain. Twelve healthy albino wistar rats were divided into four groups. Group I…

View On WordPress

Text
projectchampionz
projectchampionz

Cardio Protective Activities Of N-Hexane Extract Of Desmodium Velutinum Stem On Albino Wister Rat

Cardio Protective Activities Of N-Hexane Extract Of Desmodium Velutinum Stem On Albino Wister Rat

This Research Work is on Cardio Protective Activities Of N-Hexane Extract Of Desmodium Velutinum Stem On Albino Wister Rat

ABTRACT

This study evaluates the cardio protactive effect of N-hexane extract of Desmodium Velutinum stem on albino wister rat. Rats used in this study were grouped into four and each group was fed differentely. Rats in group one, three, and four wre fed with the aid of a…

View On WordPress

Photo
humanbyweight
humanbyweight

Tick Trefoil (Desmodium sp.)

photo
Photo
dendroica
dendroica

Naked-flowered Tick-Trefoil, Desmodium nudiflorum (by me)

photo
Text
botanicsstories
botanicsstories

Highlights: 12.11.07

Lesley Scott identifying the unknown Desmodium

Lesley Scott identifying the unknown Desmodium

Growing on the Chinese hillside is a fast growing woody plant. Collected as part of the Lijiang Project Expedition in China and introduced to the garden in 2003 as Desmodium. Labelled only to Generic level it has flowered well this autumn. The image shows Lesley Scott comparing it to type specimens of the Genera held in the Herbarium.

We now know it to be D. elegans from the free filament in the floral structure of the anthers. Leguminous, light purple flowers with red oxide sepals are borne in terminal racemes. Followed by multi seeded pods in a bow shape originally green, ripening brown. The trifoliate leaves are soft to the touch, mid green in colour. The linear markings on the young wood are a multitude of silver hairs. These fade with age.

Following last night’s freezing temperatures and bright sun early this morning much of the canopy is exhibiting frost damage. Slightly tender for Edinburgh it will survive due to its falling and rooting habit rapidly making a thicket of growth.

Highlights: 12.11.07 was originally published on Botanics Stories

Text
botanicsstories
botanicsstories

Highlights: 12.11.07

Lesley Scott identifying the unknown Desmodium

Lesley Scott identifying the unknown Desmodium

Growing on the Chinese hillside is a fast growing woody plant. Collected as part of the Lijiang Project Expedition in China and introduced to the garden in 2003 as Desmodium. Labelled only to Generic level it has flowered well this autumn. The image shows Lesley Scott comparing it to type specimens of the Genera held in the Herbarium.

We now know it to be D. elegans from the free filament in the floral structure of the anthers. Leguminous, light purple flowers with red oxide sepals are borne in terminal racemes. Followed by multi seeded pods in a bow shape originally green, ripening brown. The trifoliate leaves are soft to the touch, mid green in colour. The linear markings on the young wood are a multitude of silver hairs. These fade with age.

Following last night’s freezing temperatures and bright sun early this morning much of the canopy is exhibiting frost damage. Slightly tender for Edinburgh it will survive due to its falling and rooting habit rapidly making a thicket of growth.

Highlights: 12.11.07 was originally published on Botanics Stories

Text
a-story-behind-a-moment
a-story-behind-a-moment

I love/hate finding Desmodium and Bidens (Spanish needles) stuck to my clothes even after a good few washes.