Many of his writings were signed "Madiana," the name of his homestead in France. In addition to contributions to scientific and other journals, Ricord published:
Recherches et expériences sur les poisons d'Amérique, illustrated by his own pencil.
He left many manuscripts that have not been published. This is a colonial medical text on illnesses common to Afro-Caribbean enslaved plantation laborers, but it is also a text mutually interested in poisoning and illnesses resembling poisoning. See josiah.brown.edu Library Catalog. http://128.148.252.39/record=b6053568~S7 Ricord Madianna, J. B. Recherches et Expériences Sur Les Poisons d'Amérique,: Tirés Des Trois Règnes de La Nature, et Envisagés Sous Les Rapports de L'histoire Naturelle, de La Physiologie, de Le Pathologie et de La Chimie, Avec Un Essai Sur L'empoisonnement Par Les Miasmes Des Marais, Le Mal D'estomac Des Nègres, et Les Maladies Qui Ressemblent Aux Empoisonnemens; Pour Servir a La Toxicologie Générale Du Continent d'Amérique et Des Antilles. Bordeaux: chez Charles Lawalle, neveu, libraire, allées de Tourny, no. 20, 1826. Recherches et expériences sur les poisons d'Amérique, tirés des trois règnes de la nature, et envisagés sous les rapports de l'histoire naturelle, de la physiologie, de la pathologie et de la chimie, avec un essai sur l'empoisonnement par les miasmes des marais, le mal d'estomac des nègres, et les maladies qui ressemblent aux empoisonnemens, pour servir à la toxicologie générale du continent d'Amérique et des Antilles / par J.-B. Ricord-Madianna
Family
He married Elizabeth Stryker in 1810. She accompanied him in his expeditions to the West Indies, and was a noted educator. Their son Frederick William Ricord was a New Jersey politician and author. Another son, John Ricord, was a lawyer and traveler. Jean Baptiste's brother Alexander Ricord was also a physician. He was educated in Baltimore, moved to France in order to study under Cuvier, and received his diploma as doctor in medicine in Paris in 1824. He was an assistant surgeon in the French Navy, and a correspondent of the Academy of Medicine, but devoted his life chiefly to natural history, received the decoration of the Legion of Honor in 1845, and contributed largely to scientific journals. Another brother, Philippe Ricord, was a noted French physician.