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It can be found in Myristica fragrans, the nutmeg.
Myristic acid is named after the nutmeg Myristica fragrans.
Myristica fragrans - Nutmeg.
He collected male Myristica fragrans flowers on the Isle de Cayenne in about 1784.
It is sometimes called the "nutmeg family", after its most famous member, Nutmeg (Myristica fragrans).
Nutmeg oil is a volatile essential oil from nutmeg (Myristica fragrans) containing borneol and eugenol.
Nutmeg or Banda nutmeg is a spice, or the plant (Myristica fragrans) from which the spice is usually produced.
The most important products of the family by far are the nutmeg and mace spices, both derived from the seed of Myristica fragrans), a tree native to Malaysia.
Nutmeg is the shelled, dried seed of the plant Myristica fragrans, and mace is the dried net-like covering of the shell of the seed.
The most important commercial species is Myristica fragrans, an evergreen tree indigenous to the Banda Islands in the Moluccas (or Spice Islands) of Indonesia.
He was at logger-heads with M. Le Poivre, as he used to call Pierre Poivre, about the identification of nutmeg plants (Myristica fragrans).
Nutmeg is a seed found in the fleshy fruit of the nutmeg tree (Myristica fragrans) and cloves are the unopened flower buds of the clove tree (Syzygium aromaticum).
The common or fragrant nutmeg, Myristica fragrans, native to the Banda Islands of Indonesia, is also grown in Penang Island in Malaysia and the Caribbean, especially in Grenada.
The species present anthesis at night, and pollination is usually carried out by small beetles of family Anthicidae that resemble ants and consume pollen (e.g., Myristica fragrans is pollinated by Formicomus braminus).
In the 17th century, Run was of great economic importance because of the value of the spices nutmeg and mace which are obtained from the nutmeg tree (Myristica fragrans), once found exclusively in the Banda Islands.
As of now, Vallakam's economy is based on what is left of coconut cultivation, newly introduced cash crops like nutmeg (Myristica fragrans) and cacao (Theobroma cacao), remittances sent by people from the village working in other Indian states and abroad and trade.
One study has shown that the compound macelignan isolated from Myristica fragrans (Myristicaceae) may exert antimicrobial activity against Streptococcus mutans, and another that a methanolic extract from the same plant inhibited Jurkat cell activity in human leukemia, but these are not currently used treatments.