# From Ornamental Value to Antioxidant Activity: Comparative Phytochemistry of Lavandula Species and Cultivars

**Authors:** Andrea Baptista, Cecilia Brunetti, Dalila Pasquini, Luana Beatriz dos Santos Nascimento, Cassandra Detti, Francesco Ferrini, Sara Beltrami, Antonella Gori

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/metabo16010034 · 2025-12-30

## TL;DR

This study compares the chemical profiles and antioxidant activity of different lavender species and cultivars, revealing variations that affect their potential uses.

## Contribution

The study provides a comparative phytochemical and antioxidant analysis of multiple Lavandula species and cultivars under uniform conditions.

## Key findings

- Lavandula latifolia had the highest hydroxycinnamic acid content, while L. stoechas ‘Alba’ had the highest flavonoid concentration.
- Antioxidant activity was significantly correlated with flavonoid content across species and cultivars.
- Hydrocarbon and oxygenated monoterpenes were predominant terpenes, with highest levels in L. stoechas L.

## Abstract

Background: Lavandula (Lamiaceae) includes numerous species, cultivars, and hybrids widely cultivated for both their ornamental traits and for functional uses in perfumery, nutrition, medicinal, and cosmetic applications. Objectives: This study characterized the phytochemical profiles of three species (Lavandula stoechas L., Lavandula latifolia Medik., and Lavandula angustifolia Mill.), two cultivars (L. stoechas ‘Alba’ L. and L. angustifolia ‘Krajova’ Mill.), and the interspecific hybrid Lavandula × intermedia ‘Alba’ Emeric ex Loisel. Methods: All grown species and cultivars were maintained under uniform environmental and harvested simultaneously, to provide a comparative assessment of their terpene and polyphenol profiles and content, as well as their associated antioxidant activity. Results: HPLC-DAD/QTOF-MS analysis revealed differences in flavonoid and hydroxycinnamic acid content among species and cultivars. The main compounds identified were glycosylated derivatives of coumaric, caffeic, and ferulic acids, along with luteolin and apigenin derivatives. L. latifolia Medik. exhibited the highest hydroxycinnamic acid content (5.306 ± 1.265 mg/g FW), whereas L. stoechas ‘Alba’ L. showed the highest flavonoid concentration (2.537 ± 0.192 mg/g FW). GC-MS analysis indicated that hydrocarbon and oxygenated monoterpenes were the predominant terpene classes, with the highest levels recorded in L. stoechas L. (1922.09 ± 144.12 ng/g FW oxygenated; 945.89 ± 159.26 ng/g FW hydrocarbon monoterpenes). Antioxidant activity, assessed via DPPH and FRAP assays, was significantly correlated with flavonoid content across species, cultivars, and the hybrid. Conclusions: Intraspecific and interspecific variability within the Lavandula genus influences antioxidant activity and determines its suitability for different applications.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** coumaric acid (PubChem CID 637542), caffeic acid (PubChem CID 689043), ferulic acid (PubChem CID 445858), luteolin (PubChem CID 5280445), apigenin (PubChem CID 5280443)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** flavonoid (MESH:D005419), DPPH (MESH:C004931), terpene (MESH:D013729), polyphenol (MESH:D059808), coumaric, caffeic, and ferulic acids (-), luteolin (MESH:D047311), monoterpenes (MESH:D039821), hydrocarbon (MESH:D006838), hydroxycinnamic acid (MESH:D003373), apigenin (MESH:D047310)
- **Species:** Lavandula angustifolia (lavender, species) [taxon 39329], Lavandula x intermedia (species) [taxon 1196215], Lavandula latifolia (species) [taxon 39331], Lavandula stoechas (species) [taxon 39333]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12844421/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12844421