Showing posts with label 2019. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2019. Show all posts
Wednesday, 16 October 2019
Monday, 30 September 2019
Anthogonium gracile ( Slender Anthogonium) - Sikkim Flora
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Order: Asparagales
Family: Orchidaceae
Genus: Anthogonium
Species: A.
gracile
Binomial name: Anthogonium gracile Wall. ex Lindl. (1836).
Other Names: Slender
Anthogonium, Anthogonium griffithii, Anthogonium corydaloides
Special feature: Anthogonium is a genus of
orchids. At the present time (May 2014), only one species is recognized, i.e.,
Anthogonium gracile found in India, Assam, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar,
Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Guangxi, Guizhou, Tibet, and
Yunnan.(Source: Wikipedia)
Slender
Anthogonium is a deciduous, miniature to medium sized terrestrial orchid found
in eastern Himalayas in semi-deciduous and deciduous dry lowland forests. The
plants have ovoid pseudobulbs carrying 1-3, deciduous, stalked, narrowly
lance-shaped leaves. The plant blooms in fall season on an erect, slender, very
long (up to 45 cm), branched or simple, raceme with 10-12 flowers that do not
open well. The flowers are pink-purple in color and a strongly remind of
Corydalis.
Flower Identified
by: Mita Aich
Ask IDs of Indian Plants ( Facebook
Page)
Friday, 27 September 2019
Senna Alata (candle bush) - Sikkim Flora
Sakyong Chisopani JHS (12.09.22) |
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Order: Fabales
Family: Fabaceae
Genus: Senna
Species: S.
Alata
Binomial name : Kalanchoe blossfeldiana
Poelln.
Other Names: Cassia
alata, Emperor's candlesticks, candle bush, candelabra bush, Christmas candles,
empress candle plant, ringworm shrub
Special feature: S. alata is native to most of
the Neotropics (from Mexico and the West Indies to Paraguay), and can be found
in diverse habitats. In the tropics, it grows up to an altitude of 1,200 metres
(3,900 ft). It is an invasive species in Austronesia.
The shrub stands 3–4 metres (9.8–13.1 ft)
tall, with leaves 50–80 centimetres (20–31 in) long. The leaves close in
the dark. The inflorescence looks like a yellow candle. The fruit, shaped like
a straight pod, is up to 25 cm long. Its seeds are distributed by water or
animals. The seed pods are nearly straight, dark brown or nearly black, about
15 centimetres (5.9 in) long, and 15 millimetres (0.59 in) wide. On
both sides of the pods is a wing that runs the length of the pod. Pods contain
50 to 60 flattened, triangular seeds.
Senna alata (also known as Cassia alata) is often
called the ringworm bush because of its very effective fungicidal properties,
for treating ringworm and other fungal infections of the skin. The leaves are
ground in a mortar to obtain a kind of "green cotton wool". This is
mixed with the same amount of vegetable oil and rubbed on the affected area two
or three times a day. A fresh preparation is made every day. Its active
ingredients include yellow chrysophanic acid.
Its laxative effect, due to its anthraquinone
content, is also well-proven. Senna alata is locally known as akapulko in the
Philippines where it is used as both an ornamental and medicinal plant due to
its laxative, purgative and anti-fungal properties. In Sri Lanka, known as
Ath-thora, it is used as an ingredient in Sinhala traditional medicine. (Source: Wikipedia)
Friday, 16 August 2019
Chinese Lard Seed (Hodgsonia heteroclita) - Sikkim Flora
Scientific
classification
Kingdom:
Plantae
Order:
Cucurbitales
Family:
Cucurbitaceae
Subfamily:
Cucurbitoideae
Tribe:
Sicyoeae
Genus:
Hodgsonia
Species: H. Heteroclite
Binomial
name:
H. Heteroclite, Hook.f. & Thomson
1853
Other
Names: Chinese
Lard Seed
Special
feature: Hodgsonia is a small genus of fruit-bearing vines
in the family Cucurbitaceae.
Hodgsonia was named for
Brian Houghton Hodgson in 1853 by British botanists Joseph Dalton Hooker and
Thomas Thomson, who examined the plant under Hodgson's hospitality in the Himalaya.
Although the flesh of
Hodgsonia fruit is inedible and considered worthless, the large, oil-rich seeds
are an important source of food.
The medicinal
importance of Hodgsonia is mostly in its leaves. In Malaya and java, native
physicians report several uses for the nose. The leaves may be dried and burnt,
and the smoke inhaled, or the juice of young stems and leaves is squeezed into
the nostrils to allay irritation from small insects. The leaves are also boiled
and the resulting liquid taken internally, both for nose complaints and to
reduce fevers.
In Nagaland, the fruit
bulb is applied to bacterial infections in the feet. In Sarawak, Hodgsonia oil
is used to anoint the bodies of mothers after childbirth; it also forms the
base of embrocations carrying ashes from the leaves of coconut palm and Kaempferia.
The oil is also used as a base for medicines in Eastern India. (Source : Wikipedia)
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