Prickly lettuce
General poisoning notes:
Prickly lettuce (Lactuca
scariola) is a naturalized herb found across parts of southern Canada. In
the western United States, cattle developed pulmonary emphysema after ingesting
the plant. The injury appears to be associated with a deficiency, because the
toxicity develops after the cattle have fed on dry rangelands. When they are
subsequently moved to lush, autumn pasture, some cattle feed ravenously on the
prickly lettuce regrowth and, in a few days, the symptoms may develop (Beath et
al. 1953).
Nomenclature:
Scientific Name: Lactuca scariola L.
Vernacular
name(s): prickly lettuce
Scientific family
name: Compositae
Vernacular family
name: composite.
Geographic Information
Manitoba, New
Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec.
Notes on Poisonous plant parts:
Mature plants and
dried plant material are reported to be harmless. Regrowth of the plants in
autumn has caused poisoning in field cases in the western rangelands of the
United States (Beath et al. 1953).
Toxic parts:
Young shoots.
Toxic plant chemicals:
Unknown chemical.
Animals/Human Poisoning:
Note: When an
animal is listed without additional information, the literature (as of 1993)
contained no detailed explanation.
Cattle
General symptoms of poisoning:
Breathing,
labored, emphysema, weakness.
Notes on poisoning:
Symptoms include
pulmonary emphysema, characterized by weakness and difficult breathing.
Postmortem examination shows the lung tissue inflamed, with almost complete
destruction of the air-cell tissue (Beath et al. 1953).
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