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THE YELLOW JASMINE A PRETTY POISON By Ashleigh Jones
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Page 1: THE YELLOW JASMINE A PRETTY POISON By Ashleigh Jones.

THE YELLOW JASMINE

A PRETTY POISON

By Ashleigh Jones

Page 2: THE YELLOW JASMINE A PRETTY POISON By Ashleigh Jones.

WHAT IS A YELLOW JASMINE AND WHAT DO THEY LOOK

LIKE?

Yellow Jasmine (Gelsemium sempervirens) are

yellow trumpet shaped flowers that sometimes have

an orange center which grow from a vine and its

leaves are evergreen. These flowers are strongly

scented and attracts a large range of pollinators.

Page 3: THE YELLOW JASMINE A PRETTY POISON By Ashleigh Jones.

CASE STUDY

On June 28th 1871 General Ketchum was found

dead in his boarding house. Police suspected the

land lady Elizabeth G. Warton had poisoned him. The

case was brought to professor Wormly who once

wrote an article on the Yellow Jasmine. Upon

examining the flower he was able to isolate an

alkaloid gelsemia that existed on an acid termed by

him to be gelseminic acid. Sadly the case against

Mrs. Warton didn’t hold and she was found not

guilty.

Page 4: THE YELLOW JASMINE A PRETTY POISON By Ashleigh Jones.

TOXINS AND WHAT THEY EFFECT

Coumarin- moderately toxic to the liver and

kidneys(used in rat poison)

Tannin- causes bowl and kidney irritation, liver damage,

irritation of the stomach, and gastrointestinal pain

Gelsemine and Gelsedine- paralyzes the central nervous

system (other effects are similar to strychnine)

Page 5: THE YELLOW JASMINE A PRETTY POISON By Ashleigh Jones.

Difficulty in use of voluntary muscles

Muscle rigidity and weakness

Dizziness

Loss of speech

Dry mouth

Visual disturbances

Drooping of the eyelids and jaw

Pulse rate and core body

temperature drop dramatically

Skin irritation (in certen people)

SYMPTOMS OF POISONING

Trembling of extremities

Pupil dilation

Slowed cardiac activity

Profuse sweating

Respiratory depressions

Convulsions

Feeble respiration (overdose)

Paralysis (overdose)

Death

Page 6: THE YELLOW JASMINE A PRETTY POISON By Ashleigh Jones.

FUN FACTS

It has been reported that this flower is even toxic to honeybees when they drink

the nectar and causes ‘death broods’ when gathered by the bees.

Some children have mistaken the flower for honeysuckle and have been

poisoned by sucking the nectar from the flower and since it only takes 2-3 g to

kill an adult it wont take much to kill a small child in fact it takes only one flower

to kill a child

These plants have once been used for medical purposes but the use if them has

decreased once they realized how poisonous the plant was. The plant is restricted

in some Australian states and in Germany the use of the yellow jasmine for

therapeutic purposes is not permitted.

Death may occur within one to seven and a half hours from ingestion.