It is a dietary staple for the Sand Rat (Psammomys obesus).
Extracts from the leaves have shown to have significant hypoglycemic effects
According to Jewish tradition, the leaves of Atriplex halimus (orache), known in Mishnaic Hebrew as leʻūnīn (Hebrew: לעונין),[2] and in biblical Hebrew (see: Job 30:4) as maluaḥ (Hebrew: מלוח),[3] is said to be the plant gathered and eaten by the poor people who returned out of exile (in circa 352 BCE) to build the Second Temple. Maimonides, in his commentary on Mishnah Kilaim 1:3, as also Ishtori Haparchi in his seminal work, Kaftor u'ferach, both mention the leʻūnīn by its Arabic name, al-qaṭaf, a plant so-named to this very day. In the Mishnah (ibid.) we are told that the laws prohibiting the growing of diverse kinds in the same garden furrow do not apply to beets and to orache (Atriplex spp.) that are grown together, although dissimilar
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Photos 11/4/2016 by George Konstantinou
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