Do watermelon seeds contain cyanide?

0 votes
asked Jan 14, 2019 in Other-Food Drink by arlienmik (220 points)
Do watermelon seeds contain cyanide?

2 Answers

0 votes
answered Jan 14, 2019 by cristinpowers (390 points)
Watermelon seeds are very safe to eat and do not contain cyanide like some other seeds do.

The stomach acid in your stomach will also not allow the watermelon seeds to grow so you will not grow a watermelon in your stomach from eating watermelon seeds.

My dad used to tell me that watermelons would grow in my belly when I was little and ate watermelon seeds but he was just joking.

Apple Seeds do contain some Cyanide but in very small doses they're not harmful to humans.
0 votes
answered Jul 15, 2024 by Justinfartty (5,130 points)
The plant that releases cyanide are millet sprout plants, lima bean plants, soy plants, spinach plants, bamboo shoots, cassava roots and almonds and almond plants.

Cyanide occurs naturally as part of sugars or other naturally occurring compounds.

Cyanide is found in natural substances in some foods and certain plants which include the seeds and pits of some common fruits.

Cyanide is also used in manufacturing to make textiles, plastics and paper and is used in chemicals used to develop photographs.

Low levels of cyanides are found in nature and in products we commonly eat and use.

Cyanides can be produced by certain bacteria, fungi and algae.

Cyanides are also found in cigarette smoke, in vehicle exhaust, and in foods such as spinach, bamboo shoots, almonds, lima beans, fruit pits and tapioca.

Cyanide is a rapidly acting, potentially deadly chemical that interferes with the body's ability to use oxygen.

Cyanide can be a colorless gas or liquid, such as hydrogen cyanide (HCN) or cyanogen chloride (CNCl).

Cyanide can also be a crystal (solid) form such as sodium cyanide (NaCN) or potassium cyanide (KCN).

In chemistry, cyanide is a chemical compound that contains a C≡N functional group.

This group, known as the cyano group, consists of a carbon atom triple-bonded to a nitrogen atom.

In inorganic cyanides, the cyanide group is present as the cyanide anion ⁻C≡N.

This anion is extremely poisonous.

108,712 questions

117,619 answers

1,356 comments

7,058,495 users

...