Inventory of Wetland Plants of Select Freshwater Environs of Kanyakumari District, with Emphasis on their Indigenous use

Inventory of Wetland Plants of Select Freshwater Environs of Kanyakumari District, with Emphasis on their Indigenous use

Authors

  •   G. Jerlin Deletta   Department of Botany and Research Centre, Scott Christian College (Autonomous), Nagercoil, Tamil Nadu
  •   S. Jeeva   Department of Botany and Research Centre, Scott Christian College (Autonomous), Nagercoil, Tamil Nadu
  •   V. Mohan   Forest Protection Division, Institute of Forest Genetics and Tree Breeding, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu
  •   B. Parthipan   P.G. and Research Department of Botany, S.T. Hindu College, Nagercoil, Tamil Nadu

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36808/if/2018/v144i12/141862

Keywords:

Wetland plants, Nelumbo nucifera, Neptunia oleracea, Polygonum barbatum

Abstract

Floristic studies were carried out for the period of two years (October 2014 and October 2016) in select ponds of Azhagapapuram village in Agastheeswaram taluk of Kanyakumari district, Tamil Nadu. A total of 65 angiosperm taxa belonging to 30 families, 53 genera, and 15 orders under 10 clades/groups were documented. The major clades were commelinids (23 species), lamiids (10 species) and monocots and asterids (7 species), Campanulids, Fabids and Malvids (5 species). Dominant families were Poaceae with 11 species followed by Cyperaceae (7), Fabaceae and Compositae (4 each), Convolvulaceae, Hydrocharitaceae and Amaranthaceae (3 each), Apocynaceae, Araceae, Commelinaceae, Nyctaginaceae, Onagraceae, Polygonaceae and Plantaginaceae were represented by 2 species each and the remaining 16 families by one taxon each. As regards morpho-ecologic characters, 32 taxa were found to be marshy and wetland plants, 16 emergent anchored hydrophytes, 7 floating anchored hydrophytes, 5 free floating hydrophytes and 5 submerged hydrophytes. Of the 65 taxa recorded 37 were found to have utility value. Most of the plants were recorded to have medicinal value, with 37 species being used in traditional system of medicine to treat over 55 ailments.

References

Abdullah M.B., Sanusi S.S., Abdul S.D. and Sawa F.B.J. (2009). An assessment of the herbaceous species vegetation of Yankari Game Reserve, Bauchi, Nigeria. AmericanEurasian J. Agri. & Envir. Sciences, 6: 20-25.

Adhikar S.B and Babu M.M. (2008). Floral diversity of Baanganga Wetland, Uttarakhand, India. Check List, 4: 279-290.

Agharkar S.P. (1923). The present position of our knowledge of the aquatic flora of India.

Muslim A. S. and Vyas V. (2015). Assessment of macrophytic diversity in selected reaches of river Narmada at Hoshanabad district of Madhya Pradesh. Inter. J. sci. Engi. and Technology Research, 4(10): 3338-3344.

Ambasht R.S. (1968). Ecology of River Bank. Proc. Symp. Recent Advances in Ecobiological Research. Varanasi: 455-470 pp.

Bhadri B.B., Singh B. and Desai B.L. (1962). Water Plants. New Delhi.

Biswas K. and Calder C.C. (1936). Handbook of common Water and Marsh Plants of India and Burma. New Delhi.

Chambers P.A., Lacoul P., Murphy K.J. and Thomaz S.M. (2008). Global diversity of aquatic macrophytes in fresh water. Hydrobiologia, 595(1): 9-26.

Cook C.D.K. (1996). Aquatic and wetland plants of India, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 385 pp.

Deb D.B. (1976). A study on the aquatic vascular plants of India. Bulletin of the Botanical Society of Bengal, 29: 155-170.

Gamble J.S. and Fischer C.E.C. (1915-1935). Flora of the Presidency of Madras (Vol. 1-3), London: Adlord and Sons Ltd. 1389 pp.

Handoo J.K. and Kaul V. (1982). Phytosociological and crop studies in wetlands of Kashmir, In: wetlands ecology and management, (B. Gopal, R.E. Tomer, R.G. Wetzel, R.G and D.F. Whigham eds.), International scientific publications, Jaipur: 187-195pp.

Henry A.N. and Nair N.C. (1983-1989). The Flora of Tamil Nadu (3 vols.). Coimbatore: Botanical Survey of India. 613 pp.

Hooker J.D. (1872-1897). Flora of British India. (Vol. 1-7), Ashford: Reeve and Company. 55-68 pp.

Jain A., Sundriyal M., Roshnibala S., Kotoky R., Kanjilal P.B., Singh H.B. and Sundariyal R.C. (2011). Dietary use and conservation concern of edible wetland plants at indo-Burma hotspot: A case study from northeast India. J. Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine, 7: 1-17.

Jeeva S. and Femila V. (2012). Ethnobotanical investigation of Nadars in Atoor Village, Kanyakumari district, Tamilnadu, India, Asian Pacific J. Tropical Biomedicine,1691(12): S593-S600.

Jeppesen E., Lauridsen T.L., Kairesalo T. and Perrow M.R. (1998). Impact of submerged macrophytes on fishzooplanktoninteractions in lakes; 91-114 pp., In: The structuring role of submerged macrophytes in Lakes (E. Jeppesen, M. Sondergaard, M. Sondergaard and K. Christoffersen eds.) Ecological Studies 131. NewYork: Springer.

Jeyakumar Jerome J., Kamaraj M., Durairaj P., Prema D. and Anburaja V. (2014). Ethobotanical studies on Kallanai Thanjavur district. Pelagia Research Library, 4(3): 5-8.

Johnsy G., Davidson Sargunam S. and Kaviyarasan V. (2012). Indigenous knowledge of medicinal plants used for the treatment of skin diseases by the Kanni tribe of Kanykumari district. Inter. J. Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, 4: 309-313.

Kabeer K.A.A. and Nair V.J. (2009). Flora of Tamil NaduGrasses. Coimbatore: Botanical Survey of India. 525 pp.

Kavya A. And Jayanthi G. (2014). Survey of medicinal plants in the coastal areas of Kandalloor Panchayat, Alappuzh district. J. Scientific Transactions in Environment and Technovation, 7(3): 121-129.

Krishnasamy J., Rajendran A. and Sarvalingam A. (2014). Ornamental aquatic and semi- aquatic plants in Coimbatore district. Biolife, 2: 557-571.

Lohidas J., Parthipan B. and Bency A. (2015). Medicobotanical studies of angiosperms from AVM canal bank in Kanykumari district, Tamilnadu, India, Plant archives, 15: 93-100.

Maliya S.D. and Singh S.M. (2004). Diversity of aquatic and wetland macrophytes vegetation oof Uttar Pradesh (India). J. Economic and taxonomic Botany, 28: 935-975.

Matthew K.M. (1993). The flora of Tamilnadu Carnatic. Vol. IIII. The Rapinat Herbarium, Tiruchirappalli, Tamilnadu, India.

Meena R., Thirumal Thangam R. and Prabavathy H. (2010). Indigenous medicinal usages of some macrophytes of the wetlands in Agasteeswaram, Kanyakumari District, Tamil Nadu. J. Basic and Applied Sciences, 4: 117-122.

Mohanan M. and Henry A.N. (1994). Flora of Thiruvananthapuram, Trivandrum: Botanical Survey of India.

pp.

Misra R. (1944). The Vegetation of Raighat Ravines. J. Indian Botanical Society, 23: 113-121.

Misra V.K. (2015). Successional pattern and plant species divercity in the aquaic and wetland habitats of north-central Uttar Pradesh, India. Indian Forester, 141(1): 57-67.

Mitchell S.F. and Perrow M.R. (1998). Interactions between grazing birds and macrophytes; 29-78 pp., In: Ecology and management of the Aquatic vegetation of the Indian Subcontinent (E. Gopal ed.). Dordrecht: Kluweer Academy publishers.

Panda T. (2010). Preliminary study of Ethno-Medicinal plants used to cure different diseases in Coastal district of Orissa, India. British J. Pharmacology and Toxicology, 1: 67-71.

Prasad S.N., Ramachandra T.V., Ahalya N., Sengupta T., Kumar A., Tiwari A.K., Vijayan V.S. and Vijayan L. (2002). Conservation of wetlands of India - A review. Tropical Ecology, 43: 173-186.

Ramachandra T.V. (2010). Wetlands: need for appropriate strategies for conservation and sustainable management. J. Basic and Applied Biology, 4(3): 1-17.

Ramarajan S., Murugesan A.G. and Saravana Gandhi A. (2015). Biodiversity of aquatic macrophytes in Suchinthram Theroor birds sanctuary, Kanykumari District, Tamil Nadu, India. Indian Forester, 141(10): 1046-1049.

Rasingam L. (2010). Aquatic and wetland plants of Little Andaman Island, India. In: Proceedings of the National Seminar on Conservation and Management of Wetlands in an Era of Climatic Change; Organized by Department of Botany, N. M. Christian College, Marthandam, Kanyakumari, Tamil Nadu, India.

Rekha T., Radha V., Berjini P.B., Jeba Juliet Joy D. and Sheeja B.D. (2010). Hydrophyte diversity of Kanyankulam wetlands ecosystem of Kanyakumari district, Tamil Nadu, India. In: Proceedings of the National Seminar on Conservation and Management of Wetlands in an Era of Climatic Change; Organized by Department of Botany, N. M. Christian College, Marthandam, Kanyakumari, Tamil Nadu, India.

Santapau H. and Henry A.N. (1994). A dictionary of the flowering plants in India. New Delhi: CSIR, 198 pp.

Sathiya Geetha V., Reginald Appavoo M. and Jeeva S. (2010). Ecological status of Vadasery wetland, Kanyakumari district, Tamil Nadu-India. J. Basic and Applied Biology, 4(3): 69-85.

Shah J.P, Dabgar Y.B. and Jain B.K. (2011). Quantitative analysis of aquatic macrophytes in certain wetlands of Kachchh district. Gujarat J. Pure and Applied Science 19: 11-13.

Singh A.K. (2006). A contribution to the aquatic and wetland flora of Varanasi. J. Economic and Taxonomic Botany, 30:624.

Singh A.K., Panday R.K. and Singh S. (2006). Understanding wetlands. Everyman's Science, XLI: 116-119.

Subramanyam K. (1962). Aquatic angiosperms. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi.

Sukumaran S. and Raj A.D.S. (2009). Enumeration of aquatic and semi-aquatic angiosperms in sacred groves of Kanyakumari district, Southern Western Ghats. J. Economic and Taxonomic Botany, 33: 26-31.

Sukumaran S. and Uma Devi and Kingston C. (2010). Wetland medicinal plants of Vilavancode Taluk, Kanyakumari,Tamil Nadu, India. In: National Seminar on conservation and management of wetlands in an area of climate change (Paul Raj K. Samuel P.D. and Jeeva, S. eds.). City: Publisher. 23pp.

Selvamony S. and Jeeva S. (2011). Angiosperm flora from wetlands of Kanyakumari district, Tamil Nadu, India. Check List, 7: 486-495.

Taft O.W and Haig S.M. (2005). The value of agricultural wetlands as invertebrate resources for wintering shorebirds. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 110: 249-256.

Udayakumar M. and Ajithadoss K. (2010). Angiosperms, Hydrophytes of five ephemeral lakes of Thirvallur district, Tamil Nadu, India, Check List, 6: 270-274.

Uma R. and Parthipan R. (2015). Survey on medicobotanical climbers in Pazhayaru river bank of kanyakumari disctrict, Tamil Nadu. J. Medicinal Plants Studies, 3:33-36.

Uma R. (2015). Angiosperm flora of Pazhayar river basin, Kanyakumari district, Tamil Nadu, India, Ph.D. thesis, Manonmaniam Sundaranar University, Tirunelveli: 210pp

Vander Valk A.G and Davis C.B. (1976). Changes in the composition, structure and production of plant communities 412 along a perturbed wetlands coenocline. Vegetatio, 32: 87-96.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Published

2018-12-14

How to Cite

Deletta, G. J., Jeeva, S., Mohan, V., & Parthipan, B. (2018). Inventory of Wetland Plants of Select Freshwater Environs of Kanyakumari District, with Emphasis on their Indigenous use. Indian Forester, 144(12), 1198–1210. https://doi.org/10.36808/if/2018/v144i12/141862

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 3 4 > >> 
Loading...