Like other Campanulas, all parts of the plant exude white latex when injured or broken.
It is filled with a sticky white latex.
One gallery features large wall reliefs in black or white latex that turn out to be casts of paintings.
When cut or injured, the fruit bodies ooze a white latex that does not change color upon exposure to air.
It is toxic because of the white latex that the foliage contains.
Ripe fruits exude a white latex when severed from the branch.
The plant as a whole yields a milky, white latex.
Many species contain white latex in the leaves and stems.
The sticky white latex is eaten for treating diarrhea and skin ailments.
The stem and all parts of the plants produce a white latex when broken.