Lords and Ladies
By woodlandstv
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Here Professor Anthony Moore of the University of Sussex tells us about the Arum Lily (Arum maculatum), also known as `Knights & Ladies` (Devon); `Soldiers & Sailors` (Somerset); `Stallions & Mares` (Lincolnshire) which is a source of his scientific specialism - the AOX protein. Professor Moore and his team are joined by Professor Kikukatsu Ito of Iwate University in Japan who is supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science and has been studying similar thermogenic properties in the Skunk Cabbage.
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/lifesci/moorelab/
http://www.jsps.go.jp/english/
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/lifesci/biochemistry/people/list/person/231487 An Adliberate film http://www.adliberate.co.uk for WoodlandsTV http://www.woodlands.co.uk/tv
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Discussion
+Randy J Jack in the Pulpit is a completely different aroid. This on is Arum Italicum.
What a pleasure to listen english language correctly expressed.
the American common name for this plant is Jack in the Pulpit
Randy J
June 8, 2014