No. Opium is a refined product derived from the opium poppy, papaver somniferum, which grows in abundance all over the world.
There are many different species that are endangered in Florida. 8 species of ammphibians endangered 1 species of arachnids endangered 23 species of birds endangered 11 species of clams endangered 8 species of coralsm jellyfish and sea anemones endangered 25 species of crustaceans endangered 33 species of fishes endangered 18 species of insects endangered 15 species of mammals endangered 53 species of plants endangered 9 species of reptiles endangered 13 species of snails endangered
No. There are many poppy species, but opium referrers to the substance collected from one species (Papaver somniferum, the opium poppy).
No, it is not an endangered species
a slogan about endangered species
No, they are not endangered species.
No, kangaroos are not an endangered species.
no, iguanas are not a endangered species
Humans are the main reason that puma is endangered species. As a species, the puma is not an endangered species. Only the Florida race is endangered.
An endangered species is near extinction
An endangered species is near extinction
the Swordfish are not listed as an endangered species. the Swordfish are not listed as an endangered species.
Papaver somniferum is hardly endangered! The world's pharmaceutical industry depends on the raw opium from this plant for manufacturing the plethora of narcotic drugs widely available throughout the world. And I suppose a quick survey of Afghanistan will show you that the plant is thriving in this and other parts of the world that harvest opium for illicit conversion into heroin. So the short answer is No, "Opium Poppy" (Papaver Somniferum) is not endangered what-so-ever in the least.