Naked Lady. This beautiful plant is so dangerous that its poison effects can be mistaken with arsenic intoxication. No cure is known, so you better stay away from the luring beauty of this flower and it's good to keep the rest of the family and pest away, too.
Foxglove is notable for its tubular-shaped purple, pink, white, and yellow flowers. Depending on the species, the digitalis plant may contain several deadly toxins, leading to its other nickname, Witch's Glove.
Some of these flowers include borage, calendula, carnation, dandelion, scented geraniums and roses. They contain a few non-essential fats, carbohydrates so you do not have to worry about side effects.
Rose petals, violets, sunflower petals, pansies, snapdragons, and some marigolds can all be eaten raw, by dogs and people.
napellus, also known as monkshood or wolfsbane) is a perennial herb often grown as an ornamental plant due to its attractive blue to dark purple flowers. All parts of the plant, especially the roots, contain toxins.
Pink oleander (Nerium oleander)
Bleeding Heart – A gorgeous plant with flowers shaped like hearts that appear to be dripping blood. The whole plant is poisonous. Bloodroot – Beautiful, but leading to organ failure if ingested. Foxglove – Contains digitalis, fatal.
RHODODENDRON: Danger, caution.
Known colloquially as the gympie gympie (from the Gubbi Gubbi/ Kabi Kabi name for the plant, gimpi gimpi), gympie stinger, and giant stinging tree (D. excelsa), this plant has the dubious honour of being arguably the most painful plant in the world.
The Answer Is: Daisies Daisies, which are considered Chrysanthemums, are toxic to childrens and can cause a range of symptoms including skin rashes and blistering.
Where they grow: Native to mountainous regions, tulips are most commonly found in places that have dry summers and cold winters. What's poisonous: The leaves, stems, roots, and berries are all toxic, with the bulbs containing the greatest amount of toxic chemicals.
Examples of plants in Australia that may cause contact dermatitis are chrysanthemums, primula, tomato plants, grevillea, english ivy and occasionally rhus trees. Lantana or vegetables such as parsnip or celery may cause photo-contact dermatitis.
Known as Gympie-gympie in Australia and salat in Papua New Guinea, contact with this leaf can result in human death, more often extreme pain that can last for months. Stinging hairs deliver a potent neurotoxin when touched. Leaf has medicinal purposes in some PNG tribes. Scientific name is Dendrocnide moroides.
Dendrocnide moroides, commonly known in Australia as the stinging tree, stinging bush, or gympie-gympie, is a plant in the nettle family Urticaceae found in rainforest areas of Malesia and Australia. It is notorious for its extremely painful and long-lasting sting.
It's called aconitine, and it's a natural defense mechanism made by the aconite plant, also called monkshood for the shape of its flowers. For its effects, aconite is called wolfsbane, dogsbane and even, disturbingly enough, wifesbane. It grows in mountain meadows across the Northern Hemisphere.
Aconitum, part of the buttercup family, goes by various nicknames depending on the exact species - Monkshood, Wolfsbane, the Queen of Poisons, or Devil's Helmet. Its reputation for death goes all the way back to the mythical Greek dog Cerberus, from whose saliva the plant supposedly grew.
The titan arum manufactures its aroma, often likened to the smell of rotting flesh, to attract insects carrying pollen.
Lily (white) - Innocence & purity.
Oleander Nerium
Every portion of this plant is packed of toxins, making it the most dangerous plant on the planet. Oleandrin and neriine are two of the most potent. The poison of an oleander is so potent that it can even poison someone who eats honey created by bees that have ingested oleander nectar.