The Promising Antiradical Potential of Castanospermum australe A. Cunn. and C. Fraser ex Hook.

2018 ◽  
pp. 331-354
Author(s):  
Sajeesh Thankarajan ◽  
Rahul Chandran ◽  
Murugan Rajan ◽  
Saikumar Sathyanarayanan ◽  
Parimelazhagan Thangaraj
1996 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 193 ◽  
Author(s):  
OD Seeman

Two flower-inhabiting ameroseiid mites exhibited different degrees of host specificity; Hattena panopla occurred only in Bruguiera gymnorhiza, but Hattena cometis occurred in Aegiceras corniculatum, Castanospermum australe, Dendrophthoe vitellina, Erythrina variegara, Aloe sp. and Amyema sp. Both species of mite consumed nectar and probably pollen in the laboratory. Flowers of B. gymnorhiza were short lived and senesced after about 5 days. Most H. panopla inhabited the flower for 1-3 days and relied on birds for transport between flowers, but could move from flower to flower via plant stems and were found on ants visiting dying flowers. H. panopla responded to an aging flower by moving out of the petals onto the calyx. All post-larval stages of H. panopla were phoretic; many immature mites of both species dispersed by climbing onto the dorsal surface of dispersing adult mites. The dispersal of immature mites and the behavioural response of H. panopla to flower age were considered to be adaptations to the mite's ephemeral habitat. Adult female H. cometis and adult male and female H. panopla had sucker-like ambulacra that lacked claws, a probable adaptation for phoresy.


2006 ◽  
Vol 33 (7) ◽  
pp. 571 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Rader ◽  
A. Krockenberger

Mammal assemblages of rainforest communities are commonly vertically stratified. This can be associated with competition for, or access to, resources in the upper canopy layers of the forest. This study investigated the extent of vertical stratification in a small mammal community of a tropical rainforest and whether any structure was related to resource abundance. The mammal community was vertically stratified, with Pogonomys mollipilosus and Cercartetus caudatus found only in the upper canopy layers and Rattus sp., Isoodon macrourus and Antechinus flavipes rubeculus on the ground and in the understorey layer. Melomys cervinipes and Uromys caudimaculatus were found at all four height layers. Total rodent captures were not significantly correlated with the abundance of fruit and flower resources, but arboreal captures of M. cervinipes and P. mollipilosus were correlated with the number of individual canopy trees of four prominent flower- and fruit-yielding species: Syzigium sayeri, Acmena graveolens, Argyrodendron perelatum and Castanospermum australe. We suggest that arboreal behaviour in these rodents serves to provide the advantages of first access to food resources, the availability of abundant resources in the canopy, and, ultimately, reduced competition in the upper strata.


1977 ◽  
Vol 30 (8) ◽  
pp. 1827 ◽  
Author(s):  
RC Berry ◽  
RA Eade ◽  
JJH Simes

The isolation of koparin, a minor constituent of the wood of Castanospermum australe, is described. By a combination of chemical and spectroscopic methods koparin was shown to be either 7,3?,4?-tri- hydroxy-2?-methoxyisoflavone (5) or 7,2?,3?-trihydroxy-4?- methoxyisoflavone (6). The latter compound has been synthesized by demethylenation of 7-hydroxy-4?-methoxy-2?,3?-methylenedioxyiso- flavone (9) and is identical with koparin.


Holzforschung ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 61 (3) ◽  
pp. 326-332 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurie James Cookson ◽  
Damian Kile Scown ◽  
Kevin James McCarthy ◽  
Narelle Chew

Abstract Timber specimens were impregnated with the organo-silicate tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS) in an effort to deposit hard silica granules and improve resistance to wood-borers. Trials were conducted against marine borers (teredinids and Limnoria), the termite Coptotermes acinaciformis, and the wood-boring beetle Lyctus brunneus. A 14-week laboratory bioassay against C. acinaciformis showed that treated Pinus radiata containing 16.7 wt.% silica was as readily attacked as untreated timber. However, a 3-year laboratory trial of treated Castanospermum australe showed that attack by L. brunneus was prevented by 10.3 wt.% silica, and reduced by 0.7 and 3.4 wt.% silica. A trial of wood treated with copper-chromium-arsenic followed by silicon was conducted in the sea at Townsville, Australia for 7 years. Double treatment with 6.7 or 19.2 wt.% silica prevented attack in P. radiata by teredinids, while for CCA alone some replicates failed. In the same trial, double-treated Corymbia maculata with lower silica retention failed. Silica granules may overwhelm the food and waste-sorting mechanisms in teredinids and lyctine larvae, whereas borers, requiring less intimate contact with granules (Limnoria and termites), or those that do not ingest wood for food (Sphaeroma and Martesia), are little affected.


1988 ◽  
Vol 51 (6) ◽  
pp. 1198-1206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Russell J. Molyneux ◽  
Mabry Benson ◽  
Rosalind Y. Wong ◽  
Joseph E. Tropea ◽  
Alan D. Elbein

1966 ◽  
Vol 19 (9) ◽  
pp. 1717 ◽  
Author(s):  
RA Eade ◽  
I Salasoo ◽  
JJH Simes

Bayin, a phenolic compound from the wood of Castanospermum australe Cunn. & Fras., has been shown to be 8-C-β-D-glucopyranosyl-7,4?- dihydroxyflavone,


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