Scientists at the Centre for Medicinal Plants Research,
Arya Vaidya Sala, Kottakkal, have reported the discovery of a rare plant
species from the Dhoni hills in Palakkad district.
It
was during an expedition to study the floristic diversity of the high
mountains in the southern regions of the Western Ghats that the
researchers led by scientist K.M. Prabhu Kumar and director Indira
Balachandran came across the new species in the grasslands of the
Palamala hills in the Dhoni mountain range.
The plant belonging to the genus Chlorophytum
of the Asparagaceae family was later reported from the Elival hills of
Muthikulam in Palakkad by a team comprising scientists from the Kerala
Forest Research Institute, Peechi.
Named Chlorophytum palghatense,
after the place of discovery, the plant is a perennial herb endemic to
the grassland ecosystem of the Dhoni and Muthikulam forests at a height
above 6,000 feet. It flowers and fruits from September to November. The
finding has been published in ‘Phytotaxa’, an international journal on
botanical taxonomy.
Distributed throughout Africa and India, the Chlorophytum genus is represented by 17 species in India, of which 15 occur in the Western Ghats.
Detailed taxonomic studies carried out at Shivaji University, Kolhapur, revealed that the new species was distinct from C.sharmae endemic to Munnar. Mr. Kumar said C.Palghatense
was named thus to highlight the rich biodiversity of Palakkad district,
especially as a reservoir of rare plants endemic to the Western Ghats.
A
study has been taken up to assess the medicinal properties of the new
species, a pressnote quoting Ms. Indira Balachandran said. C.Palghtense has been found to be similar to safed musli (C.borivilianum), a medicinal herb also widely marketed as an aphrodisiac.
V.S.
Hareesh and K.P. Vimal from the Department of Botany, Calicut
University, and S.R.Yadav and Avinash Asraji Adsul from Shivaji
University were part of the research team that reported the discovery of
the new plant.
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