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Physical location:
74.08.09a
Plant names
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Drosera Minziesii
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Drosera Minziesii
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Drosera Peltata
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Drosera Peltata
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Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to Edward Curr, 1874-08-09 [74.08.09a ]. R.W. Home, Thomas A. Darragh, A.M. Lucas, Sara Maroske, D.M. Sinkora, J.H. Voigt and Monika Wells (eds), Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, <https://vmcp.rbg.vic.gov.au/id//letters/1870-9/1874/74-08-09a-final.odt>, accessed June 9, 2026
1
Letter not found. The text given here is from 'The supposed poisonous herb', Geelong advertiser, 5 October 1883, p. 4 (B83.10.06).
It was prefaced by a letter to the editor from James Riley, Inspector of sheep and
stock, Geelong district, in which he said 'As I see in many of the papers various
accounts of the Drosera or Sundew Herb, which has killed a number of cattle in the
neighborhood of the You Yangs, I enclose you a copy of a report I got in '74, from
Dr. Mueller, through the Chief Inspector of Stock.' Accounts of the cattle deaths appeared in the Geelong advertiser during September 1883 and were reprinted in the metropolitan press. Some of these
stated that M had been sent a sample of the suspect plant and 'pronounced it to be
a deadly poisonous herb' (Geelong advertiser, 25 September 1883, p. 2). However, some correspondents were not convinced that the
plant was the cause of the disease occurring at the time; see, for example, letters
from Hugh Richmond and William Lugg to the Editor, Geelong advertiser, 29 September 1883, p. 3.
See also M to the Secretary, Shire of Corio, 12 August 1874 (in this edition as 74-08-12a).
Sir,
In reply to your letter, received this day,
I have the honor to inform you that the plants just submitted to me as likely to
have caused the death of cattle on the You Yangs common are two species of drosera,
or sundew herbs (D. Peltata and D. Minziesii
), belonging to a genus well known to possess poisonous qualities, as ascertained
by independent observation in various parts of the globe, inasmuch as this genus of
plants has a very wide geographical range: nine species occur in our own colony, and
these are all minutely described in the first volume of my "Plants of Victoria,"
and subsequently in the second volume of Bentham's "Flora Australiensis,"
a work mainly aided by myself in English, while I selected one as a representative
species for the first facial
of the "Educational Collection,"
recently here issued. All these kinds of plants elaborate and exude an acidulous
and acrid sap, so blistering that formerly the sundew herbs were used as epispastick
in surgery. It is in the early spring season when these plants are most dangerous,
as their tender foliage shrivels when dry summer heat sets in. The roots are, however,
perennial; thus, in the instances of D. Peltata and D. Minziesii, producing a small
tuber. Hence to cope with such plants it is recommendable that the soil in which they
abound should be ploughed and sown with perennial grasses, clover, lucerne, and other
fodder plants calculated to suppress by vigorous and lasting growth those noxious
sundew herbs, while thus also sufficient nutriment would be afforded on now often
overstocked pastures for preventing horses, sheep, and cattle to browse extensively
on dangerous weeds for want of better forage.
2
Letter not found.
3
D. menziesii?
4
B62.03.03, pp. 54-62, where ten species are described.
5
Bentham (1863-78), vol. 2, pp. 452–70, where ten species are indicated as being found
in Victoria.
6
fascicle?
7
Exsiccatae; see Lucas, Maroske and Brown-May (2006), and Maroske (2007).
I have the honor to be, sir, your obedient servant,
(Signed) Fer. Von Mueller.
Melbourne, August 9th, 1874.