Comparative study of the chemical composition of essential oils of five Tagetes species collected in Venezuela

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Abstract

The leaves and inflorescences of five species of Tagetes, family Asteraceae, were collected from different locations in Mérida state, Venezuela, and their essential oils analyzed by GC and GC/MS. Several differences were observed in the composition of these oils, mainly regarding the major components, which for T. caracasana were trans-ocimenone (64.3%) and cis-tagetone (13.7%), and for T. erecta, piperitone (35.9%) and terpinolene (22.2%). High amounts of trans-anethole (87.5%) and estragole (10.7%) were observed in T. filifolia, while T. subulata essential oil contained terpinolene (26.0%), piperitenone (13.1%) and limonene (10.8%). For T. patula, two different oil samples were analyzed, leaves (TPL) and inflorescences (TPI). The TPL oil showed terpinolene (20.9%) and piperitenone (14.0%) as main components, while the TPI sample was composed mainly of β-caryophyllene (23.7%), terpinolene (15.6%) and cis-β-ocimene (15.5%).

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Armas, K., Rojas, J., Rojas, L., & Morales, A. (2012). Comparative study of the chemical composition of essential oils of five Tagetes species collected in Venezuela. Natural Product Communications, 7(9), 1225–1226. https://doi.org/10.1177/1934578x1200700932

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