Pteridophytes of Manambolly Range in Anamalai Tiger Reserve

Pteridophytes of Manambolly Range in Anamalai Tiger Reserve

Authors

  •   M. Johnson   Centre for Plant Biotechnology, Department of Botany, St. Xavier's College (Autonomous), Palayamkottai, Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu - 627 002
  •   Vidyarani George   Centre for Plant Biotechnology, Department of Botany, St. Xavier's College (Autonomous), Palayamkottai, Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu - 627 002
  •   I. Silvia Juliet   Centre for Plant Biotechnology, Department of Botany, St. Xavier's College (Autonomous), Palayamkottai, Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu - 627 002
  •   I. Anwardeen   Tamil Nadu Biodiversity Conservation and Greening Project for Climate Change Response, Chennai - 600 032, Tamil Nadu
  •   S. Ramasubramanian   Anamalai Tiger Reserve, Tamil Nadu Forest Department, Pollachi, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu - 641 043
  •   M. G. Ganesan   The Project Nilgiri Tahr, Tamil Nadu Forest Department, Coimbatore 641 043, Tamil Nadu
  •   J. Peter Prem Chakravarthi   Anamalai Tiger Reserve, Tamil Nadu Forest Department, Pollachi, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu - 641 043

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36808/if/2026/v152i4/170648

Keywords:

Anamalai Tiger Reserve; Pteridophytes; Ferns; Fern allies; Manambolly.

Abstract

The present investigation was undertaken to list the ferns and fern allies of Manambolly Range, Anamalai Tiger Reserve. 87 pteridophytes belonging to 38 genera and 20 families were observed. Among the 20 families observed, Pteridaceae is dominant with 23 species. Pteris (10) and Asplenium (6) = Adiantum (6) > Selaginella (5) > Christella (4) = Athyrium (4) and Bolbitis (3), showed dominance in the studied area. Based on the ecological habitat, a total of 24 species are terrestrial, 16 species are Terrestrial / Lithophytes, 13 species are Terrestrial / Sciophytes, 7 species are epiphyte / Lithophytes, 4 species belong to epiphytes, 3 Riverines, and 4 Rheophytes. Merophyte, epiphytes, lithophytes / Sciophytes and Wetlands pteridophytes also observed. Among the recorded Pteridophytes, 18 Pteridophytes are considered as common, 56 are occasional, 7 are least concern, four listed as endemics, three categorized as risk, one is classified as rare Bolbitis semicordata (Baker) Ching. Of these, Athyrium cumingianum is a new addition to the Pteridophytes of Tamil Nadu. Based on available literature the study revealed various biological activities viz., antibacterial (19), antioxidant (13) and anti-inflammatory (11) of the observed ferns and fern allies of Anamalai Tiger Reserve.

References

Alex C.R. and Johnson M. (2021). Lycophytes and Ferns of Nedumangad to Kulashekaram, Indian Forester, 147(7): 657-66.

Balendra P. S. and Ravi U. (2014). Medicinal Pteridophytes of Madhya Pradesh, Journal of Pharmacognosy and Phytochemistry, 3(3): 173-176.

Benjamin A. and Manickam V.S. (2007). Medicinal pteridophytes from the Western Ghats, Indian Journal of Traditional Knowledge, 6: 611–618.

Benniamin A. (2011) Medicinal ferns of North East India with special reference to Arunachal Pradhesh, Indian Journal of Traditional Knowledge, 10(3): 516-522.

Benniamin A. and Sundari S.M. (2020). Pteridophytes of Western Ghats: A Pictorial Guide. Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh Publications.

Brahmachari G., Mondal S., Chatterjee D. and Brahamachari A.K. (2003). Phytochemicals and Biological activities of Adiantum Species, Journal of Scientific & Industrial research, 62: 1119-1130.

Chandra S., Fraser-Jenkins C.R., Kumari A. and Srivastava A. (2008). A Summary of the Status of Threatened Pteridophytes of India, Taiwania, 53(2): 170-209.

Das A.K., Dutta B.K. and Sharma G.D. (2008). Medicinal plants used by different tribes of Cachar district, Assam, Indian Journal of Traditional Knowledge, 7(3): 446-454.

Fraser-Jenkins C.R. (2008). Taxonomic Revision of Three Hundred Indian subcontinental Pteridophytes with a revised census-list: A new picture of fern-taxonomy and nomenclature in the Indian subcontinent. Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh, Dehra Dun.

Fraser-Jenkins C.R., Gandhi K.N., Kholia B.S., Benniamin A. (2017). An annotated checklist of Indian pteridophytes Part- 1 (Lycopodiaceae to Thelypteridaceae). Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh. Dehra Dun.

Fraser-Jenkins C.R., Gandhi K.N., Kholia B.S. (2018). An annotated checklist of Indian pteridophytes Part- 2 (Woodsiaceae to Dryopteridaceae). Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh. Dehra Dun.

Fraser-Jenkins C.R., Gandhi K.N., Kholia B.S., Kandel D.R. (2021). An annotated checklist of Indian pteridophytes Part- 3 (Lomariopsidaceae to Salviniaceae). Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh. Dehra Dun.

Ganesan V, Thangaraj SP, Sivaprasad PS. and Subbaiyan B. (2019). Endemic Flora of Western Ghats – Anamalais Volume 1. Anamalai Tiger Conservatives Foundation, Tamil Nadu Trust, Pollachi.

Johnson M., Shivananthini B., Silvia Juliet I., Vidyarani G., Anwardeen I., Ramasubramanian S., Ganesan M.G. and Peter Prem Chakravarthi J. (2024a). Floristic Studies on Lycophytes and Ferns of Ulandy and Pollachi range of Anamalai Tiger Reserve. Indian Forester, 150(6): 573 - 561.

Johnson M., Silvia Juliet I., Vidyarani G., Shivananthini B., Anwardeen I., Ramasubramanian S., Ganesan M.G. and Peter Prem Chakravarthi J. (2024b). Lycophytes and Ferns of Valparai range in Anamalai Tiger Reserve, Western Ghats, Southern India. Journal of Economic and Taxonomic Botany, 48(2): 101 - 109.

Karthik V., Raju K., Ayyanar M., Gowrishankar K. and Sekar T. (2011). Ethnomedicinal uses of Pteridophytes in Kolli Hills, Eastern Ghats, J. Nat. Prod. Plant Resour., 1(2): 50-55.

Manickam V.S. and Irudayaraj V. (1992). Pteridophytes Flora of the Western Ghats of South India, (BI Publications of Pvt Ltd, New Delhi, India).

Meenakshi S., Raghavan G., Ajay K.S.R. and Prem B.K. (2008). Antimicrobial flavonoid rutin from Pteris vittata L. against pathogenic Gastrointestinal microflora, American Fern Journal, 98(2): 98-103.

Ramachandran V.S. (2007). Wild edible plants of the Anamalais, Coimbatore district, Western Ghats, Tamilnadu. Indian Journal of Traditional Knowledge 6(1):173-176.

Sathiyaraj G., Thangavelu M. and Ravindran K.C. (2015). Ethnomedicinal importance of fern and fern allies traditionally used by tribal people of Palani Hills (Kodaikanal), Western Ghats, South India, Journal of Medicinal Herbs and Ethnomedicine, 1(1): 4-9. 10.13140/RG.2.1.1569.1366.

Shil A. and Dutta M.C. (2009). Ethnomedicinal importance of Pteridophytes used by Reand tribe of Tripura, North East India, Ethnobotanical Leaflets, 13: 634-643.

Sureshkumar J., Ayyanar M. and Silambarasan R. (2020). Ethnomedicinal uses, phyoconstituents and pharmacological importance of pteridophytes used by Malayalis in Kolli hills, India: a quantitative survey, Journal of Herbal Medicine, 25: 100418 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hermed.2020.100418.

Susan H. (2020). Plant community diversity will decline more than increase under climatic warming. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. B3752019010620190106. http://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2019.0106.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Published

2026-04-30

How to Cite

Johnson, M., George, V., Silvia Juliet, I., Anwardeen, I., Ramasubramanian, S., Ganesan, M. G., & Peter Prem Chakravarthi, J. (2026). Pteridophytes of Manambolly Range in Anamalai Tiger Reserve. Indian Forester, 152(4), 387–393. https://doi.org/10.36808/if/2026/v152i4/170648

Issue

Section

Articles

Most read articles by the same author(s)

Loading...