umbellularia californica leaf oil
california laurel leaf oil
Identification
| Name | umbellularia californica leaf oil |
| CAS Number | 8026-89-9 |
| FDA UNII | Search |
Regulatory
Physical Properties
| Food Chemicals Codex Listed | No |
| Soluble in | alcohol |
| Insoluble in | water |
No sensory data available
Safety Information
| Oral/Parenteral Toxicity | oral-mouse LD50 2700 mg/kg |
| Dermal Toxicity | Not determined |
| Inhalation Toxicity | Not determined |
GHS Classification
['GHS Classification in accordance with 29 CFR 1910 (OSHA HCS)', 'GHS Label elements, including precautionary statements']
Safety in Use
| Category | information only not used for fragrances or flavors |
| Recommendation for umbellularia californica leaf oil usage levels up to | not for fragrance use. |
| Recommendation for umbellularia californica leaf oil flavor usage levels up to | not for flavor use. |
No supplier data available
Potential Uses
Natural Occurrence
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.