02-06-2014, 08:55 AM
(02-06-2014, 08:32 AM)Lotus Wrote: The recognition of ‘clover disease’ in Australian sheep in the 1940s led to the investigation of oestrogenic activity of isoflavones. The sheep whose diet was predominately subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum L., Fabaceae) suffered from a reproductive disorder that reduced the lambing rates and involved abnormal lactation, changes in the sex organs, and permanent infertility [30, 31]. Indeed, the phytoestrogens are present in green clover and are not present at senescence.
(02-06-2014, 08:32 AM)Lotus Wrote: My apologies to breast quest for the hijacked thread. Lovely, why don't you create your own thread about Red Clover, this way we can come to understand your belief about the cross-link to which you refer to.
Trifolium pratense is red clover
I was thinking of starting a new thread about red clover, right before I read that. I didn't mean to hijack this thread, I was trying to show the source.

