
Leonotis leonurus L. R. Br. (Lamiaceae): Anatomical features and recreational use survey of a possible substitute for Cannabis sativa L. (Cannabaceae)
Author(s) -
Ignacio Agudelo,
Karina A. Borri,
Leonardo Martín Anconatani,
Cecilia Dobrecky,
Marcelo L. Wagner,
Rafael A. Ricco
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
medicinal plant communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2452-4433
DOI - 10.37360/mpc.21.4.2.06
Subject(s) - trichome , lamiaceae , cannabis , biology , traditional medicine , botany , medicine , psychiatry
Leonotis leonurusL. R. Br. (Lamiaceae) is a medicinal plant native to the South Africancontinent also employed as a recreational drug and a substitute to Cannabis sativaL. (Cannabaceae). Given the interest of the last mentioned species as a source of treatments for epilepsy among many other pathologies and its possible substitution for L. leonurus, the aim of this article is obtain anatomical and micrographical characters for its identification in chopped or powdered material and to survey the user ́s perceptions about this plant based in posts extracted from a recreational drug user Internet forum. L. leonurusleaves have pluricellular tector trichomes and two classes of pluricellular trichomes with unicellular and pluricellular heads, styloid crystals in its mesophyll among many other characters, while the flowers have wooly trichomes and characteristic pollen granules. Regarding the Internet forum survey, it was reported that L. leonurusleaves and flowers were the employed parts and that the mode of use was smoked. The reported effect was sedative. The anatomical data reported in this article may help to identify L. leonurusin pharmaceutical or forensic contexts.