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- From: klier@iscsvax.uni.edu
- Newsgroups: rec.pets.cats
- Subject: Re: House plants
- Message-ID: <1992Dec31.103751.9607@iscsvax.uni.edu>
- Date: 31 Dec 92 10:37:51 -0600
- References: <18911@mindlink.bc.ca> <1992Dec28.104831.12243@thelema.uucp>
- Organization: University of Northern Iowa
- Lines: 33
-
- In article <1992Dec28.104831.12243@thelema.uucp>, STella@thelema.uucp (STella) writes:
- > In article <18911@mindlink.bc.ca> Jack_Webb@mindlink.bc.ca (Jack Webb) writes:
- >>Cat Fancy magazine of May 1988 has a good article on cats and houseplants...
- >>here is a list of some of the more poisonous plants.
- >>
- >>Amaryllis Arrowhead vine/Nephthysis Asparagus Fern
- >
- > Asparagus fern? I've been using asparagus ferns as the one plant the
- > beasts can munch for ages with no ill effect, had seen other articles
- > on dangerous plants that had it as an OK bush, and have given
- > asparagus ferns to other knowledgeable catfolk's kitties as a present
- > without the kitties' people objecting. My old vet, back in Ann Arbor,
- > would plop an asparagus fern on the exam table to distract kitties
- > while the shot went in.
-
- 'S fine. It's a close relative of the vegetable asparagus, and
- can cause allergic reactions in some critters/people, but then so
- can almost anything.
-
- > I didn't see coleus on that list, and it's one of the ones I won't let
- > in the house....
-
- Naw, coleus is OK, too. It's a reasonably close relative of catnip.
- In fact, I can't think of anything in the mint family (Labiatae or
- Lamiaceae) that IS toxic. (Plant ID hint: the mint family has
- square stems and opposite leaves. If you see that, look at the
- flowers. They should be bilaterally symmetrical, and there should
- be 2-4 "seeds" produced per flower. If you've got a plant with
- square stems, opposite leaves, bilaterally symmetrical flowers
- and LOTS of seeds produced per flower, you've got another plant
- family (probably the Scrophulariaceae, the snapdragon family).
-
- Kay Klier Biology Dept UNI
-