Corydalis cava (L.) Schweigg. & Körte is a plant in the Papaveraceae family, order Ranunculales, kingdom Plantae. Toxic/Poisonous.

Photo of Corydalis cava (L.) Schweigg. & Körte (Corydalis cava (L.) Schweigg. & Körte)
🌿 Plantae ⚠️ Poisonous

Corydalis cava (L.) Schweigg. & Körte

Corydalis cava (L.) Schweigg. & Körte

Corydalis cava is a spring ephemeral plant containing alkaloids including the occasionally medicinally used bulbocapnine.

Family
Genus
Corydalis
Order
Ranunculales
Class
Magnoliopsida

⚠️ Is Corydalis cava (L.) Schweigg. & Körte Poisonous?

Yes, Corydalis cava (L.) Schweigg. & Körte (Corydalis cava (L.) Schweigg. & Körte) is classified as poisonous or toxic. Toxicity risk detected (mainly via ingestion); avoid direct contact and ingestion. Never consume or handle this species without proper identification by an expert.

About Corydalis cava (L.) Schweigg. & Körte

Corydalis cava (L.) Schweigg. & Körte grows between 15 cm (6 in) and 30 cm (12 in) tall. It is a spring ephemeral: foliage that emerges in spring dies back to its tuberous rootstock during summer. Its long-spurred flowers appear in spring, and can be colored mauve, purple, red, or white. The plant’s seeds have an elaiosome that attracts ants, which carry the seeds to their ant colonies. This method of seed dispersal is called myrmecochory. Many species in the genus Corydalis contain alkaloids such as canadine and corydaline, which are part of the isoquinoline alkaloid group and block calcium. All parts of Corydalis cava contain alkaloids, but the highest concentrations are found in its hollow root tuber. Corydalis cava and some other tuberous Corydalis species contain the alkaloid bulbocapnine. Bulbocapnine is occasionally used in medicine, but there is currently no scientific evidence to establish correct dosages or safe side effect profiles for it.

Photo: (c) fkfhof, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by fkfhof · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Plantae Tracheophyta Magnoliopsida Ranunculales Papaveraceae Corydalis
⚠️ View all poisonous species →

More from Papaveraceae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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