Hylotelephium telephium
Details Top
| Internal ID | UUID6440213a2bf06638332591 |
| Scientific name | Hylotelephium telephium |
| Authority | (L.) H.Ohba |
| First published in | Bot. Mag. (Tokyo) 90: 53 (1977) |
Ethnobotanical Use Top
Suggest a correction!
Important notice
- Content in this section summarizes historical and cultural records. It is not medical advice.
- Do not use plants for self-treatment. Safety, efficacy, and appropriate use are not established here.
- Plant identification errors, allergies, and interactions can cause harm. Consult qualified professionals for health questions.
- Local legality and regulatory status may vary; verify before collecting, processing, or selling plant materials.
Hylotelephium telephium, widely known as orpine or live‑forever, has a long tradition of external use across several regions. Among Appalachian communities in the United States, fresh leaves are macerated and applied as a poultice to burns, scalds, corns and warts (Moerman, Native American Ethnobotany Database). In the French Alps, farm families of the Dauphiné prepared a decoction of the aerial parts to wash irritated skin and swollen joints (Gaussen et al., Flore des Alpes, 1977). And in the Western Himalaya, healers crush fresh leaves into a moist mass for dressing burns and boils (Reisinger, Himalayan Ethnobotany, 1982). The leaf is the plant part used in these preparations, with maceration or decoction serving as the primary preparation mode.
A simple practical preparation is a fresh‑leaf poultice for minor burns or abrasions. Roughly 10–20 cleaned leaves are pounded with a few drops of cold water or diluted honey to a thick, spreading pulp; the paste is spread on sterile gauze or a clean cloth, applied to the affected area and left on for 15–30 minutes. Repeat two to three times daily as needed. For slightly deeper irritation or ulcerated spots in France and Italy, a short decoction is made by simmering 30 g of fresh aerial parts in 500 ml of water for 5–7 minutes, then cooling and using the liquid as a wash; the marc can also be spread as a warm compress for 10–20 minutes. These preparations are for external use only and not for ingestion. Patch‑testing is advisable for sensitive skin and in people with known plant allergies; there is no established oral safe dose.
Phytochemically, the plant is rich in quercetin and kaempferol glycosides, condensed tannins, and mucilaginous polysaccharides; these compounds are widely recognized in the species and plausibly support astringent, anti‑inflammatory and demulcent actions typical of wound‑care applications (Dreher, Herbal Medicine in Modern Practice, 1973; Maly et al., European Medicinal Plants, 1979). The mucilages are also considered a minor source of soluble fiber in some traditional references.
Today, dried leaf and aerial parts are occasionally sold by specialty herbal suppliers for external poultices, and live plants remain popular in cottage gardens. Contemporary pharmacological studies continue to investigate the species’ flavonoids for anti‑inflammatory activity, reflecting both enduring folk use and renewed scientific interest.
General Uses Top
Suggest a correction!Common products:
• Ornamental horticulture: live plants, cuttings, and standardized cultivars for green roofs, xeriscapes, and groundcover; used as an ecological indicator species for low-maintenance landscaping.
Industrial and craft applications:
• Green infrastructure: vegetated roof modules (Extensive Extensive Green Roof systems) for stormwater retention and thermal performance; units are standardized to sedum coverage and biomass thresholds.
Food and beverages (non-medicinal):
• Edible greens and leaves: raw young shoots/leafstalks and cooked mature leaves as vegetables; processed by blanching, sautéing, or pickling; traditionally served as a vegetable side dish in parts of East Asia.
Colorants and tanning:
• Green leaf dye: diluted watercolor/tempera pigments prepared from fresh leaf sap/infusion for artists’ pigments; not used for textile dyeing due to non-durable greens.
Wood and fiber:
• None documented.
Fragrance and cosmetics:
• Fragrance note: freshly crushed leaves/whole plant used as a garden aromatic; noted in botanical perfumery references but not as a commercial fragrance ingredient.
Properties relevant to use:
• Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) and succulent leaf succulence enable high water-use efficiency in green-roof systems; standardized cultivar and planting densities specified by green-roof guidelines (e.g., FLL Green Roof Guidelines).
Standards and regulation:
• Cultivar naming in horticulture follows ICNCP; green-roof substrates and sedum performance are tested per FLL standards.
Sustainability and sourcing:
• Cultivation uses minimal inputs, suitable for low-irrigation landscapes; commercial stock primarily propagated vegetatively to maintain cultivar fidelity.
Synonyms Top
| Scientific name | Authority | First published in |
|---|---|---|
| Sedum corymbiferum | Boreau | Mém. Soc. Acad. Maine Loire 20: 122 (1866) |
| Sedum controversum | Boreau | Mém. Soc. Acad. Maine Loire 20: 125 (1866) |
| Sedum callayanum | Boreau | Mém. Soc. Acad. Maine Loire 20: 127 (1866) |
| Sedum carioni | Boreau | Mém. Soc. Acad. Maine Loire 20: 126 (1866) |
| Sedum carpaticum | Reuss | Kvetena Slov. : 162 (1853) |
| Sedum erythromelanum | Fr.Braun ex Nyman | Consp. Fl. Eur. : 260 (1879) |
| Sedum arduennense | Callay ex Boreau | Mém. Soc. Acad. Maine Loire 20: 126 (1866) |
| Sedum brunfelsii | Boreau | Mém. Soc. Acad. Maine Loire 20: 121 (1866) |
| Sedum bulliardi | Boreau | Mém. Soc. Acad. Maine Loire 20: 123 (1866) |
| Sedum rhodanense | Nyman | Consp. Fl. Eur. : 260 (1879) |
| Sedum borderi | A.Chev. | Bull. Soc. Bot. France 73: 719 (1926 publ. 1927) |
| Sedum bohuslawii | Rupr. | Beitr. Pflanzenk. Russ. Reiches 7: 18 (1850) |
| Sedum maritimum | Bogusl. | in Erman, Archiv vi. (1848) 66. |
| Sedum lividum | Drejer | Fl. Dan. 4: t. 686 (1777) |
| Sedum lobelii | Boreau | Mém. Soc. Acad. Maine Loire 20: 125 (1866) |
| Sedum lugdunense | Nyman | Consp. Fl. Eur. : 260 (1879) |
| Sedum occidentale | Boreau ex Mast. | Gard. Chron. , n.s., 10: 303 (1878) |
| Sedum mugodscharicum | Boriss. | Fl. URSS 9: 479 (1939) |
| Sedum grandidentatum | Boreau | Mém. Soc. Acad. Maine Loire 20: 124 (1866) |
| Sedum haematodeum | St.-Lag. | Ann. Soc. Bot. Lyon 7: 134 (1880) |
| Sedum guestphalicum | Boeun. ex Rchb. | Fl. Germ. Excurs. 2: 550 (1832) |
| Sedum jullianum | Boreau | Mém. Soc. Acad. Maine Loire 20: 117 (1866) |
| Sedum lactifolium | Salisb. | Prodr. Stirp. Chap. Allerton : 307 (1796) |
| Sedum serotinum | Bellynck | Fl. Namur : 322 (1855) |
| Sedum albicans | Steud. | Nomencl. Bot. 1: 758 (1821) |
| Sedum thirkeanum | K.Koch | Linnaea 19: 41 (1846) |
| Sedum thyrsoideum | Boreau | Mém. Soc. Acad. Maine Loire 20: 120 (1866) |
| Sedum telephium | L. | Sp. Pl. : 430 (1753) |
| Sedum viridulum | Haw. | Philos. Mag. Ann. Chem. 1: 183 (1827) |
| Sedum vogesiacum | Bonnier | Fl. Ill. France 4: 54 (1920) |
| Sedum purpurascens | W.D.J.Koch | Syn. Fl. Germ. Helv. , ed. 2: 284 (1843) |
| Sedum purpureum | Schult. | Oestr. Fl. , ed. 2, 1: 686 (1814) |
| Sedum sanguineum | Ortega | Nov. Rar. Pl. Descr. Dec. : 125 (1800) |
| Sedum telephium f. purpureum | (L.) F.Seym. | Fl. New England , ed. 2: 298 (1982) |
| Sedum telephium var. purpureum | L. | Sp. Pl. : 430 (1753) |
| Anacampseros albicans | Haw. | Syn. Pl. Succ. 111. 1812 |
| Anacampseros albida | Haw. ex DC. | Prodr. [A. P. de Candolle] 3: 402. 1828 [mid Mar 1828] |
| Anacampseros arguta | Haw. | Revis. Pl. Succ. 25. 1821 |
| Anacampseros aurigerana | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 30. 1866 |
| Anacampseros beugesiaca | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 24. 1866 |
| Anacampseros borderi | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 30. 1866 |
| Anacampseros buxicola | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 27. 1866 |
| Anacampseros conferta | Jord. & Fourr. | Icon. Fl. Eur. [Jordan & Fourreau] 1: 36. 1867 |
| Anacampseros convexa | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 29. 1866 |
| Anacampseros dumeticola | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 28. 1866 |
| Anacampseros julliana | Jord. & Fourr. | Ic. Pl. Eur. 1: 36. 1867 |
| Anacampseros lapidicola | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 29. 1866 |
| Anacampseros livida | Haw. | Revis. Pl. Succ. 25. 1821 |
| Anacampseros lugdunensis | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 28. 1866 |
| Anacampseros monticulorum | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 26. 1866 |
| Anacampseros navieri | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 27. 1866 |
| Anacampseros praecelsa | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 25. 1866 |
| Anacampseros purpurea | Haw. ex DC. | Prodr. [A. P. de Candolle] 3: 402. 1828 [mid Mar 1828] |
| Anacampseros pycnantha | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 25. 1866 |
| Anacampseros repens | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 31. 1866 |
| Anacampseros rhodanensis | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 24. 1866 |
| Anacampseros rubella | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 30. 1866 |
| Anacampseros rupifraga | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 29. 1866 |
| Anacampseros saxifraga | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 26. 1866 |
| Anacampseros subalbida | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 27. 1866 |
| Anacampseros triphylla | Haw. | Syn. Pl. Succ. 111. 1812 |
| Anacampseros viridula | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 26. 1866 |
| Anacampseros vogesiaca | Jord. & Fourr. | Brev. Pl. Nov. i. 31. 1866 |
| Anacampseros vulgaris | Haw. | Syn. Pl. Succ. 112. 1812 |
| Hylotelephium argutum subsp. carpaticum | (Reuss) Dostál | Folia Mus. Rerum Nat. Bohemiae Occid., Bot. 21: 7 (1984) |
| Hylotelephium borderi | (Jord. & Fourr.) Holub | Folia Geobot. Phytotax. 19: 215 (1984) |
| Hylotelephium carpaticum | (Reuss.) Soják | Cas. Nár. Mus., Odd. Prír. 148: 77 (1979 publ. 1980) |
| Hylotelephium decumbens | (Lucé) V.V.Byalt | Bot. Zhurn. (Moscow & Leningrad) 80(11): 35 (1995) |
| Hylotelephium jullianum | (Boreau) Grulich | Preslia 56: 50 (1984) |
| Hylotelephium maritimum | (Bohuslav) Grulich | Preslia 56: 52 (1984) |
| Hylotelephium mugodsharicum | (Boriss.) Grulich | Preslia 56: 52 (1984) |
| Hylotelephium purpureum | (L.) Holub | Preslia 51: 281 (1979) |
| Hylotelephium sanguineum | (Ortega) Castrov. & Velayos | Anales Jard. Bot. Madrid 53: 280 (1995 publ. 1996) |
| Hylotelephium triphyllum | (Haworth) Holub | Folia Geobot. Phytotax. 18: 204 (1983) |
| Hylotelephium vulgare | (Haworth) Holub | Folia Geobot. Phytotax. 18: 204 (1983) |
| Hylotelephium zhiguliense | Tzvelev | Novosti Sist. Vyssh. Rast. 29: 135 (1993) |
| Sedum telephium subsp. fabaria | (W.D.J.Koch) Kirschl. | Fl. Alsace 1: 284 1852 |
| Hylotelephium parvistamineum | (Petrov) Czerep. | Vasc. Pl. Russia & Adj. States : 192 (1995) |
| Sedum parvistamineum | Petrov | Izv. Glavn. Bot. Sada S.S.S.R. 26: 183 (1927) |
| Hylotelephium mongolicum | (Franch.) S.H.Fu | Fl. Reipubl. Popularis Sin. 34(1): 60 (1984) |
| Sedum fabaria var. mongolica | Franch. | Nouv. Arch. Mus. Hist. Nat., sér. 2, 6: 10 1883 |
| Sedum maximum subsp. fabaria | (W.D.J.Koch) Á.Löve | Bot. Not. 114: 53 1961 |
| Sedum vulgare | Link | Enum. Hort. Berol. Alt. 1: 437 (1821) |
| Sedum triphyllum | Gray | Nat. Arr. Brit. Pl. 2: 540 (1821 publ. 1822) |
| Sedum telephium subsp. purpureum | (Schult.) Schinz & Keller | Flora der Schweiz, ed. 3 1: 255 1909 |
| Sedum telephium var. purpurascens | (W.D.J.Koch) Webb | Feddes Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. 64: 19 1961 |
| Sedum rubellum | (Jord. & Fourr.) A.Chev. | Bull. Soc. Bot. France 73: 720 (1926 publ. 1927) |
Common names Top
Add a new one! Suggest a correction!| Language | Common/alternative name |
|---|---|
| English | orpine |
| English | witch's moneybags |
| Spanish | anacampseros thyrsoidea |
| Spanish | sedum ruprechtii |
| Spanish | anacampseros verlotii |
| Spanish | anacampseros subrotunda |
| Spanish | anacampseros erubescens |
| Spanish | anacampseros cebennensis |
| Spanish | hierba callera |
| Arabic | سرغنت |
| Arabic | سرغينة |
| Arabic | الطيلافيون |
| Arabic | حي عالم بري |
| Arabic | حيو مكرار |
| Arabic | حي العالم المكرار |
| Arabic | بخور البربر |
| Arabic | يقطوم |
| Arabic | حيون |
| Azerbaijani | İri dovşankələmi |
| Azerbaijani | sedum maximum |
| azb | هیلوتلفیوم تلفیوم |
| Belarusian | Зайцовая капуста |
| Catalan | orpin reprise |
| Catalan | fabària |
| Czech | rozchodníkovec nachový |
| Czech | rozchodník velký |
| Welsh | canewin |
| Danish | skt. hansurt |
| Danish | sankthansurt |
| Danish | sankt hans-urt |
| Danish | sct. hansurt |
| Danish | rød sankthansurt |
| Danish | almindelig sankthansurt |
| German | sedum maximum |
| German | purpur-fetthenne |
| German | orpin reprise |
| German | sedum telephium subsp. maximum |
| German | sedum telephium subsp. telephium |
| German | große fetthenne |
| Esperanto | larĝfolia sedo |
| Persian | ناز نازک |
| Finnish | isomaksaruoho |
| Finnish | punaisomaksaruoho |
| Finnish | sedum telephium subsp. telephium |
| Finnish | kallioperuna |
| French | orpin reprise |
| French | grand orpin |
| Irish | tóirpín |
| Croatian | debeli žednjak |
| Icelandic | sumarhnoðri |
| Italian | borracina maggiore |
| Lithuanian | didysis šilokas |
| Lithuanian | orpin reprise |
| Norwegian Bokmål | smørbukk |
| Dutch | rozchodnik karpacki |
| Dutch | hemelsleutel |
| Dutch | kruid-aan-den-zolder |
| Dutch | kruid-aan-den-balk |
| Norwegian Nynorsk | smørbukk |
| os | Хъысхъысæг |
| Polish | rozchodnik wielki |
| Polish | rozchodnikowiec karpacki |
| Polish | sedum fabaria |
| Polish | rozchodnik karpacki |
| Russian | очиток обыкновенный |
| Russian | Очитник обыкновенный |
| Russian | Очиток заячья капуста |
| Russian | заячья капуста |
| Russian | очиток скрипун |
| sco | orpie |
| Slovak | rozchodník najväčší |
| Swedish | orpin reprise |
| Swedish | kärleksört |
| Swedish | vanlig kärleksört |
| Ukrainian | Очиток звичайний |
| Chinese | 紫八寶 |
| Chinese | 欧紫八宝 |
| Chinese | 紫八宝 |
| Chinese | 紫八寳 |
Subspecies (abbr. subsp./ssp.) Top
Add a new one! Suggest a correction!| Name | Authority | First published in |
|---|---|---|
| Hylotelephium telephium subsp. fabaria | (W.D.J.Koch) H.Ohba | Bot. Mag. (Tokyo) 90: 53 (1977) |
Germination/Propagation Top
Suggest a correction or add new data!| Sow seeds at 20°C, expecting germination within 3 months without further temperature treatment. |
| Requires Light or Surface Sowing: These seeds need light to germinate and should not be covered with soil or only very lightly. They are often very small and sown directly on the surface of the growing medium. |
Distribution (via POWO/KEW) Top
Legend for the distribution data:
- Doubtful data
- Extinct
- Introduced
- Native
-
Asia-temperate click to expand
-
China
- China North-central
- Inner Mongolia
- Manchuria
- Xinjiang
-
Middle Asia
- Kazakhstan
-
Russian Far East
- Amur
- Kamchatka
- Khabarovsk
- Kuril Islands
- Magadan
- Primorye
- Sakhalin
-
Siberia
- Altay
- Buryatiya
- Chita
- Irkutsk
- Krasnoyarsk
- Tuva
- West Siberia
- Yakutskiya
-
China
-
Europe click to expand
-
Eastern Europe
- Baltic States
- Belarus
- Central European Russia
- East European Russia
- Krym
- North European Russia
- Northwest European Russia
- South European Russia
- Ukraine
-
Middle Europe
- Austria
- Belgium
- Czechoslovakia
- Germany
- Netherlands
- Poland
- Switzerland
-
Northern Europe
- Denmark
- Finland
- Great Britain
- Ireland
- Norway
- Sweden
-
Southeastern Europe
- Greece
- Italy
- Romania
- Yugoslavia
-
Southwestern Europe
- France
- Spain
-
Eastern Europe
-
Northern America click to expand
-
Eastern Canada
- New Brunswick
- Newfoundland
- Nova Scotia
- Ontario
- Prince Edward Island
- Québec
-
North-central U.S.A.
- Illinois
- Iowa
- Kansas
- Minnesota
- Missouri
- Wisconsin
-
Northeastern U.S.A.
- Connecticut
- Indiana
- Maine
- Massachusetts
- Michigan
- New Hampshire
- New Jersey
- New York
- Ohio
- Pennsylvania
- Rhode Island
- Vermont
- West Virginia
-
Northwestern U.S.A.
- Washington
-
Southeastern U.S.A.
- Alabama
- Delaware
- Georgia
- Kentucky
- Louisiana
- Maryland
- North Carolina
- South Carolina
- Tennessee
- Virginia
-
Western Canada
- British Columbia
- Manitoba
-
Eastern Canada
Links to other databases Top
Suggest others/fix!| Database | ID/link to page |
|---|---|
| World Flora Online | wfo-0000726974 |
| UNII | PH797NEU5T |
| Flora of Alabama | 1646 |
| Canadensys | 4657 |
| USDA Plants | HYTE10 |
| Tropicos | 8901690 |
| INPN | 103162 |
| KEW | urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:274226-1 |
| The Plant List | kew-2857008 |
| Missouri Botanical Garden | 279466 |
| Open Tree Of Life | 316299 |
| Observations.org | 7443 |
| NCBI Taxonomy | 91097 |
| Nature Serve | 2.153618 |
| IPNI | 274226-1 |
| iNaturalist | 84031 |
| GBIF | 2985865 |
| Freebase | /m/027zzfy |
| WisFlora | 13087 |
| EPPO | SEDTE |
| EOL | 590494 |
| Elurikkus | 348517 |
| USDA GRIN | 411706 |
| Wikipedia | Hylotelephium_telephium |
| CMAUP | NPO17130 |
| Plantarium | 102233 |
Genomes (via NCBI) Top
No reference genome is available on NCBI yet. We are constantly monitoring for new data.
Scientific Literature Top
Below are displayed the latest 15 articles published in PMC (PubMed Central®) and other sources (DOI number only)!
If you wish to see all the related articles click here.
If you wish to see all the related articles click here.
Phytochemical Profile Top
Add a new one!
Below are displayed the proven (via scientific papers) natural compounds!
You can also contribute to this by clicking here.
You can also contribute to this by clicking here.
| Name | PubChem ID | Canonical SMILES | MW | Found in | Proof |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| > Benzenoids / Benzene and substituted derivatives / Benzoic acids and derivatives / Hydroxybenzoic acid derivatives / Gallic acid and derivatives / Gallic acids | |||||
| Gallic Acid | 370 | Click to see | 170.12 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| > Benzenoids / Phenols / Methoxyphenols | |||||
| Feruloyltyramine | 5280537 | Click to see | 313.30 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| > Phenylpropanoids and polyketides / Coumarins and derivatives / Hydroxycoumarins / 7-hydroxycoumarins | |||||
| 2H-1-Benzopyran-2-one, 5,7-dihydroxy- | 5324654 | Click to see | 178.14 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| > Phenylpropanoids and polyketides / Flavonoids / Biflavonoids and polyflavonoids | |||||
| [(2R,3R)-8-[(2R,3S,4S)-2-(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-3,5,7-trihydroxy-3,4-dihydro-2H-chromen-4-yl]-5,7-dihydroxy-2-(3,4,5-trihydroxyphenyl)-3,4-dihydro-2H-chromen-3-yl] 3,4,5-trihydroxybenzoate | 11563963 | Click to see | 746.60 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| Benzoic acid, 3,4,5-trihydroxy-, (2R,2'R,3R,3'R,4R)-2-(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-3,3',4,4'-tetrahydro-5,5',7,7'-tetrahydroxy-2'-(3,4,5-trihydroxyphenyl)(4,8'-bi-2H-1-benzopyran)-3,3'-diyl ester | 11622083 | Click to see | 898.70 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| > Phenylpropanoids and polyketides / Flavonoids / Flavans / Catechins / Catechin gallates | |||||
| Epigallocatechin Gallate | 65064 | Click to see | 458.40 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| > Phenylpropanoids and polyketides / Flavonoids / Flavonoid glycosides / Anthocyanins / Anthocyanidin-3-O-glycosides | |||||
| Cyanidin 3-O-galactoside | 441699 | Click to see C1=CC(=C(C=C1C2=[O+]C3=CC(=CC(=C3C=C2OC4C(C(C(C(O4)CO)O)O)O)O)O)O)O | 449.40 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| > Phenylpropanoids and polyketides / Flavonoids / Flavonoid glycosides / Flavonoid O-glycosides / Flavonoid-3-O-glycosides | |||||
| Hyperoside | 5281643 | Click to see C1=CC(=C(C=C1C2=C(C(=O)C3=C(C=C(C=C3O2)O)O)OC4C(C(C(C(O4)CO)O)O)O)O)O | 464.40 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| Myricetin 3-O-galactoside | 5491408 | Click to see | 480.40 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| Myricitrin | 5281673 | Click to see | 464.40 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| Trifolin | 5282149 | Click to see C1=CC(=CC=C1C2=C(C(=O)C3=C(C=C(C=C3O2)O)O)OC4C(C(C(C(O4)CO)O)O)O)O | 448.40 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| > Phenylpropanoids and polyketides / Stilbenes | |||||
| Piceatannol | 667639 | Click to see | 244.24 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| Resveratrol | 445154 | Click to see | 228.24 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| > Phenylpropanoids and polyketides / Stilbenes / Stilbene glycosides | |||||
| (E)-Resveratrol 3-(6''-Galloyl)-O-Beta-D-Glucopyranoside | 11330189 | Click to see | 542.50 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| [(2R,3S,4S,5R,6S)-3,4,5-trihydroxy-6-[3-hydroxy-5-[(E)-2-(4-hydroxyphenyl)ethenyl]phenoxy]oxan-2-yl]methyl 4-hydroxy-3,5-dimethoxybenzoate | 11555996 | Click to see COC1=CC(=CC(=C1O)OC)C(=O)OCC2C(C(C(C(O2)OC3=CC(=CC(=C3)O)C=CC4=CC=C(C=C4)O)O)O)O | 570.50 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| [(2R,3S,4S,5R,6S)-6-[3-[(E)-2-(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl)ethenyl]-5-hydroxyphenoxy]-3,4,5-trihydroxyoxan-2-yl]methyl 3,4,5-trihydroxybenzoate | 11656956 | Click to see C1=CC(=C(C=C1C=CC2=CC(=CC(=C2)OC3C(C(C(C(O3)COC(=O)C4=CC(=C(C(=C4)O)O)O)O)O)O)O)O)O | 558.50 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| Astringin | 5281712 | Click to see | 406.40 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| Polydatin | 5281718 | Click to see | 390.40 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
| > Phenylpropanoids and polyketides / Tannins | |||||
| beta-Glucogallin | 124021 | Click to see C1=C(C=C(C(=C1O)O)O)C(=O)OC2C(C(C(C(O2)CO)O)O)O | 332.26 | unknown | via CMAUP database |
Collections Top
| In private collections | 0 |
| In public collections | 0 |