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Difference between revisions of "Polygala senega - Senegaroot"
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Revision as of 09:56, 12 January 2017
Polygala senega is a species of flowering plant in the milkwort family, Polygalaceae. It is native to North America, where it is distributed in southern Canada and the central and eastern United States.[1] Its common names include Seneca snakeroot,[2] senega snakeroot, senegaroot,[1] rattlesnake root, and mountain flax.
Contents
Description
This species is a perennial herb with multiple stems up to 50 centimeters tall. The stems are usually unbranched, but some old plants can have branching stems. A mature plant can have up to 70 stems growing from a hard, woody rootstock that spreads horizontally. The lance-shaped leaves are alternately arranged. The lower leaves are reduced and scale-like. The inflorescence is a spike of rounded white or greenish flowers. The fruit is a capsule containing two hairy black seeds. The root is twisted and conical, with a scent somewhat like wintergreen and a very pungent taste. There are two root morphs; a northern morph growing in Canada and toward Minnesota has larger roots up to 15 centimeters long by 1.2 wide which are dark brown and sometimes purplish toward the top, and a southern morph found in the southeastern United States that has smaller, yellow-brown roots.
The plant grows on prairies and in woods and wet shoreline and riverbank habitat. It grows in thin, rocky, usually calcareous soils. It also occurs in disturbed habitat, such as roadsides.
Uses
- Its species name honors the Seneca people, a Native American group who used the plant to treat snakebite.
- The Cherokee[3] used it as an expectorant and a diuretic, and for inflammation, croup, and common cold.
- The Chippewa[4] used preparations of the root to treat convulsions and bleeding wounds.