spurge: Other Spurges and Their Uses
Other Spurges and Their Uses
Many spurges are of great economic importance as a source of food, drugs, rubber, and other products. The sap of most species is a milky latex, and the source of a very large part of the world's natural rubber is the latex of the Pará rubber tree. Pará rubber and several other latexes also come from plants of the spurge family. The tropical American
Other valuable commercial products of this family are castor oil and tung oil, expressed from the seeds of
Various spurges provide medicines, dyes, oils, and other products; primitive peoples utilized the poisonous saps of other spurges on arrow tips and to poison fish. The presence of poisonous substances in many euphorbias and in a number of other spurges has led these to be classed as noxious pests, especially when they grow as weeds on livestock ranges.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Classification
- Other Spurges and Their Uses
- Euphorbias
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