I know it’s said to be incredibly deadly, but on the range of poisonous plants, where does it fall? And how dangerous is it to encounter in nature?
The sap is quite poisonous. If you got some in a cut or your eyes, you could be in trouble, it is used for making poison.
However, it’s fruit is edible and the bark, roots, etc all have uses. The tree is a common shade tree.
There’s are some “travelers tales” which greatly exaggerate the deadliness of the tree.
Not dangerous, apparently.
The toxin - which is not to be trifled with - is in the sap (aka latex).
The sap has an LD50 (lethal dose for 50%) of 0.10 mg per kg of body weight. That’s quite poisonous.
For comparison, curare was also used on arrows, it has an LD50 of 0.735.
Strychnine has an LD50 of 1.0 to 2.0 in humans.
King cobra venom is almost as toxic, with an LD50 of 0.125.
So that’s a pretty toxic substance.
hi Its not poisonous! Its referred more accurately; I believe within a medical perspective; of course anyone may say that Im wrong; by the na-me of dangerous; its a dangerous tree because it can catch up to the veins which are connected to the nervous system; it is medically referred to by the name of a neurological danger .
I wouldn’t snort it either. :dubious:
Reported.
Question: does its toxicity require that it be injected into the bloodstream (for example, with an arrow)? Or is it also toxic if ingested?
Or as a suppository? It is the Upas tree after all.
I think that’s the LD50 of pure antiarin, which is the poisonous compound in the sap.
This article says that “1.5 to 2 percentage of the total weight of the original latex consists of [beta-Antinin].” So the LD50 translates to 5mg of sap per kg of body weight. Still a scary number - it implies 1/10 teaspoon of the sap can kill a person.
Well the fruit is edible. And it is possible that the sap is only dangerous thru the bloodstream, but betting on that is never safe, due to small sore or cuts in the mouth or ulcers.
That Wikipedia article says that the wood has some uses.
Umm, how do the people logging and milling the wood avoid getting in contact with the sap? Chainsaws, etc. are going to throw that stuff all over the place.
I wondered about that myself.