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  • Chaste Tree


    Five-Leaf Chaste Tree, Hindi: निर्गुंडी Nirgundi, सिंदवार Sanskrit: Sinduvara, Indrani, Nilanirgundi

    Family: Verbenaceae(Verbena family)

    Chaste tree can be described as a cross between a shrub and a tree with a single woody stem (trunk). It can grow up to five meters tall. Chaste tree’s distinctive feature are the pointed leaves with 3-5 leaflets. Small, lilac or violet flowers on new growth from June to September. Flowers are the smallest of the commonly grown Vitex species. The leaves are used as a mosquito repellent . leaves are burnt in a heap which proves very useful to get rid of Mosquitoes.
    Medicinal uses: It is an effective herbal medicine with proven therapeutic value. Chaste tree has been clinically tested to be effective in the treatment of colds, flu, asthma and pharyngitis. Studies have shown that it can prevent the body’s production of leukotrienes which are released during an asthma attack. Chaste tree contains Chrysoplenol D, a substance with anti-histamine properties and muscle relaxant. The leaves, flowers, seeds and root of Chaste tree can all be used as herbal medicine. A decoction is made by boiling the parts of the plant and taken orally. Today, Chaste tree is available in capsule form and syrup for cough.

  • White Champa, White Champak, •Hindi: चम्पा Champa Sanskrit: Champaka. Botanical name:Magnolia x alba Family: Magnoliaceae(Magnolia family)


    White Champa is a hybrid between M. champaca anf M. montana, grown as an ornamental and used medicinally. The plant is usually not fruiting and is propagated by grafting. It is a tree up to 17 m tall, up to 30 cm d.b.h. with bark gray. Flowers are very fragrant. Tepals are 10, white, lanceshaped, 3-4 cm x 3-5 mm. Staminal connective protruding and forming a long tip. Branches and leaves are fragrant after being crushed. Twigs are patent, forming a broadly umbelliform crown.Young twigs and buds are densely pale yellowish white puberulous, trichomes gradually deciduous with age. Leaf-stalks are 1.5-2 cm, sparsely puberulous, leaves long elliptic to narrowly ovate, 10-27 x 4-9.5 cm, thinly leathery, base cuneate, tip long-pointed to tip falling off. Flowering: April-September.

    Magnolia x alba

  • Kaamala Tree, Kamala Tree, dyer’s rottlera, Monkey face tree, orange kamala, red kamala, scarlet croton • Hindi: कामला kamala, रैनी raini, रोहन rohan, रोहिनी rohini, सिन्धुरी sinduri •Botanical name:Mallotus philippensis Family: Euphorbiaceae(Castor family)


    Kamala Tree (pronounced kaamlaa) is a tree found throughout India. It has been in use as medicinal tree in India for ages. The tree can grow up to 10 m tall. Alternately arranged, ovate or rhombic ovate leaves are rusty-velvety. Male and female flowers occur in different trees. Female flowers are borne in lax spike like racemes at the end of branches or in leaf axils. Male flowers occur three together in the axils of small bracts. Capsule is trigonous-globular, covered with a bright crimson layer of minute, easily detachable reddish powder. Kamala is supposed to be a very useful tree. It is source of Kamala dye which is used in colouring silk and wool. It is used as anti-oxidant for ghee and vegetable oils. Oil is used as hair-fixer and added in ointment. Seed oil is used in paints and varnishes. Seed cake is used as manure.
    Medicinal uses: According to Ayurveda, leaves are bitter, cooling and appetizer. Fruit is heating, Purgative, anthelmintic, vulnerary, detergent, maturant, carminative, alexiteric and useful in treatment of bronchitis, abdominal diseases, spleen enlargement etc

    Description
    Global Distribution

    India: Andaman & Nicobar Island, Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu

    Local Distribution

    Throughout Assam

    Uses and Management
    Uses
    System Of Medicines Used In

    Ayurveda, Homoeopathy, Folk medicine, Unani, Siddha

    The capsules are a chief source for the extraction of orange dye (Kamela). The wood is used as fuel. The fruit and leaves are used in numerous herbal preparations.

  • Peace lily, Cobra plant

    Botanical name:Spathiphyllum wallisii Family:Araceae (arum family)

     Kingdom: Plantae (plants)
     Subkingdom: Tracheobionta (vascular plants)
     Superdivision: Spermatophyta (seed plants)
     Division: Magnoliophyta (flowering plants)
     Class: Liliopsida (monocotyledons)
     Subclass: Arecidae
     Order: Arales
     Family: Araceae (Arum family)
     Genus: Spathiphyllum (peace lily)
     Species: Spathiphyllum wallisii
    Spathiphyllum wallisii

    Peace Lily, is a very popular indoor houseplant. It is a clump-growing herbaceous perennial which produces white flowers which look like the hood of a cobra. Leaves are shiny and glossy, attractive even with no spathes. Peace lilies are sturdy plants with glossy, dark green oval leaves that narrow to a point. The leaves rise directly from the soil. The long-lasting flowers start out pale green and slowly turn creamy white as they open. Keep the leaves clean with water washes to remove dust and dirt. Peace Lily can attract mites, scales and mealy bugs so cleaning will help keep these pests away.

    Temperature:Average room temperature’s are fine. Avoid lower than 55°F/12°C in the winter.
    Light:As mentioned above they like light, however, direct sunshine can damage plant leaves. A mixture of light and shade is great, if you can provide it. If you see the leaves yellowing this could be caused by too much sunlight.
    Watering:This plant does drink a lot of water in the summer. Keeping the soil moist (not over watered) and allowing it to dry slightly near the top is a good idea. If in the winter the soil stays slightly damp for a couple of weeks or more, that’s ok , dont water any more. Your plant will let you know when it needs more.
    Soil:A peat based potting mix with perlite is ideal or other peat based mixes.
    Re-Potting:Re-potting each spring is the usual drill.
    Fertilizer:Feed every 2 weeks with a diluted liquid plant food from spring until fall.
    Humidity:Misting leaves regularly will improve humidity and keep it happy.
    Propagation:When the plant is being re-potted the main plant can be divided and potted, to grow smaller plants.
    Pruning:These plants rarely need pruning…well, not at all, to reduce size anyway. You will need to cut away dying leaves and the flowers when they have seen better days and that should be about it.
  • Medicinal Plant 𝘿𝙚𝙡𝙥𝙝𝙞𝙣𝙞𝙪𝙢 𝙧𝙤𝙮𝙡𝙚𝙞 Munz.

    Taxonomic Hierarchy


    Kingdom
    Plantae  – plantes, Planta, Vegetal, plants 
        SubkingdomViridiplantae  – green plants 
           InfrakingdomStreptophyta  – land plants 
              SuperdivisionEmbryophyta  
                 DivisionTracheophyta  – vascular plants, tracheophytes 
                    SubdivisionSpermatophytina  – spermatophytes, seed plants, phanérogames 
                       ClassMagnoliopsida  
                          SuperorderRanunculanae  
                             OrderRanunculales  
                                FamilyRanunculaceae  – buttercups, boutons d’or, crowfoot 
                                   Genus

    Species
    𝘿𝙚𝙡𝙥𝙝𝙞𝙣𝙞𝙪𝙢 L. – larkspur
    𝙧𝙤𝙮𝙡𝙚𝙞
    Taxonomic Hierarchy


    Local name: Mori, Royle’s Larkspur

    Royle’s Larkspur is a herb 0.5-1 m tall, with stem simple or with a few branches, densely bristly. Sepals are deep blue, bristly, upper sepal 1.3-1.4 cm x 8-9 mm, pointed, spur 1.5-1.6 cm long, 3-3.5 mm wide at base, cylindric, horizontal, lateral sepals broadly elliptic-ovate, obtuse, 15 x 16 mm, lower sepals 15-16 x 8-9 mm, subovate, pointed. Upper petals pale, lamina glabrous, oblique, 8 mm long, shallowly bidentate, spur 14 mm long, lower petals with deep blue, bearded, roundish lamina 6 mm long, lobed for 3 mm, claw 5 mm long. Stamens 5-7 mm long, subglabrous. Stalks of lower leaves are about 10 cm, blade 5-8 cm in diameter, palmately multiply-cut, segments wedge-shaped, sharply incised, with lobes 1.5-3 mm wide, pointed, upper leaves smaller, shortly stalked to subsessile. Inflorescence is composed of a long, dense central raceme and few short looser lateral racemes. Bracts linear, 5-10 mm long, pedicels 10-25 mm long, recurved at apex, bracteoles 2.5-3 mm, near base of pedicel. Follicles 3, strigose, 10-15 x 3-4 mm wide. Seeds 1 mm long, 3-angled, usually with 5 rows of scales. Royle’s Larkspur is found in Pakistan and Kashmir.

    Flowering: July-August.

    Ethnomedicinal uses: Seeds are used as insecticide and treatment of skin eruptions.

    Delphinium roylei Munz.

  • 𝘉𝘶𝘵𝘦𝘢 𝘮𝘰𝘯𝘰𝘴𝘱𝘦𝘳𝘮𝘢  Medicinal Uses

    𝘉𝘶𝘵𝘦𝘢 𝘮𝘰𝘯𝘰𝘴𝘱𝘦𝘳𝘮𝘢 Medicinal Uses

    Taxonomic Hierarchy

        
     KingdomPlantae  – plantes, Planta, Vegetal, plants 
        SubkingdomViridiplantae  – green plants 
           InfrakingdomStreptophyta  – land plants 
              SuperdivisionEmbryophyta  
                 DivisionTracheophyta  – vascular plants, tracheophytes 
                    SubdivisionSpermatophytina  – spermatophytes, seed plants, phanérogames 
                       ClassMagnoliopsida  
                          SuperorderRosanae  
                             OrderFabales  
                                FamilyFabaceae  – peas, legumes 
                                   GenusButea Roxb. ex Willd. 
                                      SpeciesButea monosperma (Lam.) Taub. – Bengal kino

    1.2. Common names

    Bengali: kinaka, palas, paras, polashi; English: flame of the forest; Hindi: chinchra, dhak, palas, paras; Sanskrit: kinsuka, palasa, Palasha, Urdu: palash, palashpapra.

    Description

    It is a straight, medium-sized, 12-15 m high, deciduous tree with a curved trunk and asymmetrical branches. It is slowly increasing its height and diameter year by year, at the age of 50 years its diameters would be 5 to 8 m and its height about 20 to 40 cm. The wood is greenish white in color, weighs approximately about 14 to 15 kg per cubic foot. The bark is grey colored. The leaves have 3 foliate, big and stipulate, 10−15 cm length petioles. Leaflets are obtuse, glabrous at the top, finely silky-smooth and noticeably reticulate veined bottom with cunneate or deltoid base. The calyx is dark olive green to brown in colour and densely silky outside. The corolla is lengthy with silky silvery hairs in outer surface. The bark of the palash tree is fibrous and bluish−gray to light brown in colour. When incised, it exudes a kind of red gummy juice. The leaves are compound, with three leaflets. The texture of the leaflets is rough, coriascious with the surface glabrescent on the top and hairy silky at the bottom. The figure is obliquely ovate and generally elliptic. The leaves fall off by December month and re-emerge during spring.

    Reproductive features:

    When the tree is leafless, it generates orange to red colored flower. These flowers begin appearing in February and keep on forming up to the end of April month. The size is approximately about 2 to 4 cm in diameter. These tend to be firmly gathered on leafless branches. Flowers are large, inflexible racemes 15 cm long with 3 flowers jointly form the tumid nodes of the dark olive-green velvety rhachis. The calyx tends to be dark grayish like the supporting branch itself. The upper parts are orange red.

    The flowers on the superior portion of the tree make the appearance of a fire from a distance.

    The fruit of the palash is a horizontal legume, pods stalked 12.5−20 by 2.5−5 cm, solidified at the sutures. Immature pods have a bunch of hair and a silky cover and mature pods fall down. The seeds are flat, from 25 to 40 mm length, 15 to 25 mm width, and 1.5 to 2 mm thickness. The seed cover is reddish-brown in colour, silky, and wrinkled, and encloses two large, leafy, yellowish cotyledons. The hilum is conspicuous, and situated near the middle of the concave edge of the seed (Mazumder, 2011).

    Butea monosperma (Lam.) Taub (Syn. Butea frondosa; Family Fabaceae) generally known as ‘dhak’ or ‘palas’, usually known as ‘Flame of forest’, Bastard teak, Bengal kino (Kirtikar, 1935).This is moderate sized deciduous tree which is largely distributed in India, Burma and Sri lanka extending in the north west Himalayas (Chopra, 1958). This plant is often described as flame of forest due to its bright red-orange papilionaceous flowers (Tandon & Shivanna et.al 2003). All the parts of this plant, including flowers, seeds, leaves and barks possess medicinal properties (William Rasican & Kavya, 2011).

    Medicinal properties:

    The red juice gum obtained from wounded bark of the tree known as Bengal Kino, applied externally to treat ulcers [Chopra et al., 1958]. It is a potent astringent, and orally given gum juice used to treat diarrhea and dysentery; phthisis and hemorrhages from stomach and bladder. A gum juice is applied to bruises and inflammations and ringworm [Nadkarni and Nadkarni, 1976]. In unani medicine, it is used as aphrodisiac, tonic to liver; used to treat thoracic diseases [Agharkar, 1991].

    Bengal Kino, used to treat leucorrhoea [Agarwal, 1997; Dhiman, 2003] haemorrhoids, haemoptysis, diabetes, leprosy, skin diseases, pharyngodynia, general debility, hyperacidity, dyspepsia and fever [Bhattacharjee, 2001; Varier, 1993].The stem bark is used as astringent, bitter tonic, emollient, aphrodisiac, appetizer, digestive, and anthelmintic [Varier, 1993]. Orally given bark decoction used to treat catarrh, cold and coughs [Nadkarni and Nadkarni, 1976].

    Bark is used to treat liver disorders, dysmenorrhoea and gonorrhea in Unani medicine [Mhasker et al., 2000]. The leaves used as astringent, tonic, diuretic and aphrodisiac properties [Mhasker et al., 2000]. Externally applied leaves juice used to boils, pimples tumours haemorrhoids and orally given juice to treat flatulence, colic, worms infestations and piles [Nadkarni and Nadkarni, 1976].

    The root bark is utilized as an aphrodisiac and as an analgesic and anthelmintic. It is also used to treat, piles, ulcers, tumour and dropsy [Dhiman, 2003]. Seeds are used as anthelmintic for roundworms. Externally applied paste made with lemon juice to treat skin diseases [Agharkar, 1991]. Seeds contain fixed oil called as Moodsga oil. In Ayurveda seeds are used to cure skin diseases, tumours abdominal troubles; orally given seed for scorpion-sting and seeds useful in piles, eye diseases, inflammation in Unani medicine [Mhasker et al., 2000].

    The flowers used as an astringent, diuretic, depurative, aphrodisiac and tonic; In Unani medicine the flowers are used to relieve biliousness, inflammation and gonorrhoea and in Ayurveda flowers used to treat leprosy, gout, skin diseases, and their juice for eye diseases [Mhasker et al., 2000]. Among tribal population in Madhya Pradesh, externally applied flower paste over chest to treat asthma and aqueous juice of flower drink given for the treatment of sunstroke. A decoction of the petals is given to treat diarrhoea and to puerperal women [Dey, 1980]. Flowers decoction applied as poultice they reduce inflammation and facilitate diuresis and menstrual flow. Orally given aqueous extract of flower used to difficult micturition [Nadkarni and Nadkarni, 1976].

    It grows all over India and South Asia isthmus, many parts of this plant such as flower, bark, leaf and seed gum are used in traditional medicine. The Ayurvedic formulations made from this plant are used to reduce the Vata and Kapha in tridosha of Ayurvedic medicine. Butea monosperma is widely used in ayurveda, unani and homeopathic medicine. Flowers are astringent to bowel, in heal “Kapha”, leprosy, strangury, gout, skin diseases, thirst sensation; flower juice is used to treat eye diseases. Flower is bitter, aphrodisiac, expectorant, tonic, emmenagogue, diuretic, and good in biliousness, inflammation and gonorrhoea. They are used to diminish swelling and to regularize menstrual cycle. Orally given flower juice is used for the treatment of diarrhea. In addition flower juice help to treat males urinogenital tracts diseases (Sharma, 2011).

    Flower extract of Butea monosperma exhibited anticonvulsive activity, because of the presence of a triterpene (Kasture et al., 2002) and antifertility activity demonstrated by alcoholic extract of Butea monosperma flowers has also been reported (Razdan et al., 1970), and butrin illustrated both male and female contraceptive activity (Bhargava,1986).

    Previously many biological activities of the flower extracts with its isolated chemical constituents were studied and it was reported as to have anticancer activity, prophylaxis against inflammation and cancer was studied with butein a isolated chalcone; Inhibition of inflammatory gene expression from the extract of flower with its phytocontituents butein, butrin, iso butrin and isocoreopsin; antioxidant activity of flower extract with its isolated content rutin; Anti inflammatory activity, anti-diabetic effect; anticonvulsant activity and hepatoprotective effect of methanolic extract and its isolated phytochemicals isobutrin and butrin (William Rasican et al., 2011).

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