Terminalia chebula (Harar) Characterization by using Morphological Descriptors in Himalayan Region
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36808/if/2021/v147i2/156868Keywords:
Keywords, Descriptors, Terminalia chebula, diversity, morphology, Strains, India, Himalayan, medicinal tree, leaf, fruitsAbstract
Terminalia chebula Retz. plays a crucial role in foodstuff, medicine, industry, and environmental protection. The skill of recognizing the variants of the species is very important in some applications, including conservation, strain types identification and performance of strains under different agro-ecological situation. However, it is a difficult task to identify plant species because it requires specialized knowledge. Developing morphological classification system for different genotypes and variants is necessary and valuable since it can help specialists as well as the public to identify and avoid cheating. It is a medicinal tree species which is highly valued in Indian system of medicine viz Ayurveda, Yunani, Sidha etc. Terminalia chebula trees are naturally distributed in the Sub Himalayan tract up to 1400 m above mean sea level in subtropical region, although planted trees can be seen in throughout the Northern Indian region. Research has been conducted to survey, locate the variations, identify the productive strains and also identify the ecological distribution of T. chebula in different agro-ecological regions of Himalayan region. The results indicated a high diversity in fruit and leaf shapes. Nine shapes of fruits were observed in the studied locations (Oblong “Matka typeâ€, Oblong dark colour with short neck, Pyriform, Pyriform type fruit with Medium neck, Narrowly obovate without neck, Clavate with prominent neck, Oval, Ellipsoid and light coloured and Narrowly obovate medium in size with acute tip. Analysis showed that there were significant differences in leaf morphmetric characters, too. Nine shapes of leaves were observed in the region viz. Cuspidate, Elliptic, Aristate, Obtuse, Lanceolate, Ovate, Oblique, Ovoid and Oblong.References
Chauhan, Narain Singh (1999). Medicinal and Aromatic Plants of Himachal Pradesh. Indus Publishing, pp 632.
F.A. Hassler, Charaka Samhita, (1893). Science, 22(545): 17-18 .
IBPGR (1980). Tropical fruit descriptors. International board for plant genetic resources. South Asia regional committee. Working group to review the tropical fruit descriptors and strategy for collection, evaluation, utilization and conservation. Bangkok. Thailand. 299pp
Nasreldin A. Gurashi and Maha A.Y.Kordofani. (2014). Morphological Variation in Fruit Shapes of Adansonia digitata L. From Blue Nile and North Kordofan States, Sudan. Journal Of Forest Products & Industries. 3(2), 106-111.
Sanjeewa T.A.B.D, Pushpakumara D.K.N.G. and Sangakkara U.R. (2013). Morphological Characterization of Terminalia chebula Retz. In Sri Lanka. Tropical Agricultural Research, 25(1): 127-132.
SAS. (2004). As the foundation for SAS Analytics, SAS/STAT provides state-of-the-art statistical analysis software that empowers you to make new discoveries. IBM software.
Sawant R., Sandeep V.B., Manish B. and Gangasagre N.S. (2013). Phyto-constituents bioefficacy and Phytopharmacological activities of Terminalia chebula - A Review. International Journal Of Ayurveda & Alternative Medicine. 1(1).
Sneath P.H.A. and Sokal R.R. (1973). Numerical taxonomy, Freeman, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Ward J.H. (1963). Hierarchical grouping to optimize an objective function, Journal of the American Statistical Association, 58: 236-244.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Unless otherwise stated, copyright or similar rights in all materials presented on the site, including graphical images, are owned by Indian Forester.