umbellularia californica leaf oil

california laurel leaf oil

CAS: 8026-89-9

Identification

Nameumbellularia californica leaf oil
CAS Number8026-89-9
FDA UNIISearch

Regulatory

Physical Properties

Food Chemicals Codex Listed No
Soluble in alcohol
Insoluble in water

No sensory data available

Safety Information

Oral/Parenteral Toxicityoral-mouse LD50 2700 mg/kg
Dermal ToxicityNot determined
Inhalation ToxicityNot determined

GHS Classification

['GHS Classification in accordance with 29 CFR 1910 (OSHA HCS)', 'GHS Label elements, including precautionary statements']

Safety in Use

Categoryinformation only not used for fragrances or flavors
Recommendation for umbellularia californica leaf oil usage levels up tonot for fragrance use.
Recommendation for umbellularia californica leaf oil flavor usage levels up tonot for flavor use.

No supplier data available

Potential Uses

None Found

Natural Occurrence

umbellularia californica

Synonyms

california bay leaf oil california laurel leaf oil mountain laurel leaf oil umbellularia californica var. fresnensis leaf oil PubMed: Microclimate impacts survival and prevalence of Phytophthora ramorum in Umbellularia californica, a key reservoir host of sudden oak death in Northern California forests. PubMed: Comparative investigation of Umbellularia californica and Laurus nobilis leaf essential oils and identification of constituents active against Aedes aegypti. PubMed: Phytophthora ramorum does not cause physiologically significant systemic injury to California bay laurel, its primary reservoir host. PubMed: Photosynthetic Declines in Phytophthora ramorum-Infected Plants Develop Prior to Water Stress and in Response to Exogenous Application of Elicitins. PubMed: Detection, Distribution, Sporulation, and Survival of Phytophthora ramorum in a California Redwood-Tanoak Forest Soil. PubMed: Transmission of Phytophthora ramorum in Mixed-Evergreen Forest in California. PubMed: Phytophthora siskiyouensis, a new species from soil, water, myrtlewood (Umbellularia californica) and tanoak (Lithocarpus densiflorus) in southwestern Oregon. PubMed: Susceptibility to Phytophthora ramorum in a key infectious host: landscape variation in host genotype, host phenotype, and environmental factors. PubMed: Antimicrobial activity of extractable conifer heartwood compounds toward Phytophthora ramorum.