Bazsites.com Natural Toxins
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Natural Toxins: A Journal - Publish original research papers and critical review articles on the occurrence, isolation, identification, and characterization of natural products with toxic activities. Particular emphasis will be placed on evaluating the significance of the effects of such toxicants on humans.
- The Bad Bug Book - This handbook provides basic facts regarding foodborne pathogenic microorganisms and natural toxins. Each chapter focuses on either one bacteria, virus, parasite, or natural toxin, providing basic facts.
- The Bad Bug Book - This handbook provides basic facts regarding foodborne pathogenic microorganisms and natural toxins. Each chapter focuses on either one bacteria, virus, parasite, or natural toxin, providing basic facts.
- Natural Toxins Research Center - Games, coloring, and comic book about the toxins found in snakes.
- Natural Toxins Research Center - Snake Database - Natural history, images, and range maps for venomous snakes in the U.S. Includes facts on the venom of each snake.
- Pesticides, Metals, Chemical Contaminants and Natural Toxins - Program area the Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition (CFSAN) with links to information about these toxins.
- Bad Bug Book - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's handbook which provides basic facts about foodborne pathogenic microorganisms and natural toxins.
- Bad Bug Book - Information about foodborne pathogenic micro-organisms and natural toxins, including habitat or source, associated foods, infective dose, disease symptoms, complications, outbreaks, and susceptible populations.
- Botanical Dermatology Database - An electronic re-incarnation of Botanical Dermatology by John Mitchell and Arthur Rook.
- The Toxic Amanita - Fact sheet outlining the poisonous aspects of the Amanita family of mushrooms.
Wikipedia Articles
- Latrunculin - The latrunculins are a family of natural products and toxins produced by certain sponges, including genus Latrunculia, from whence the name derived. It binds actin monomers near the nucleotide binding cleft with 1:1 stoichiometry and prevents them from polymerizing.