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Abutilon indicum (L.) Sweet

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/Abutilon_indicum/Abutilon_indicum.tif.JPG
Abutilon indicum (L.) Sweet, Image kind: Illustration.
Abutilon indicum (L.) Sweet, Image kind: Photograph.
Abutilon indicum (L.) Sweet, Image kind: Herbarium specimen.
Abutilon indicum (L.) Sweet [as Abutilon albescens Miq.], Image kind: Illustration.
Abutilon indicum (L.) Sweet, Image kind: Photograph.
🗒 Synonyms
synonymSida indica L.
🗒 Common Names
Assamese
  • Japapetari
  • Jopa bondha
Bengali
  • পোটারী Potari
Eng
  • Indian Abutilon
  • Country mallow
  • Moon flower
English
  • Country Mallow
  • Country mellow
Hin
  • Atibala
  • Itawari
  • Jhili
  • Kanghi
  • Tara kanchi
Hindi
  • कंघी Kanghi
Irula
  • Suluku poo
Kannada
  • Tutti
  • Gidutingi
  • Hettukisu
  • Hetutti
  • Shrimudri
  • Urki
Malayalam
  • വെല്ലുരമ് Velluram
Marathi
  • पेटारी Petari
Other
  • Indian Mallow
  • Country Mallow
  • Abutilon
  • Indian Abutilon
  • Kattooran
  • Ooram
  • Thutthi
  • Velluram
Tamil
  • Paniyaratutti
  • Thuthi
  • Kakkati
  • Ottututti
  • Tuttikkirai
Telugu
  • Tuturabenda
  • Adavibenda
  • Botlabenda
  • Dudi
  • Nugoobenda
  • Thellabenda
mal
  • Belocre
  • Katuram
  • Pettekaputti
  • Tatta
  • Tuvatti
  • Velluram
mar
  • Akakai
  • Kansuli
  • Mudrika
  • Petaari
  • Vikankati
📚 Overview
Overview
Summary
Abutilon species are herbs, undershrubs or shrubs. Erect or procument, Branches with simple prickly or stellate hairs. Leaves simple or sometimes lobed, alternate, usually base cordate, margins crenate-dentate, apex acute to acuminate, palminerved without nectaries, petiolate, stipules persistent or caducous. Inflorescence usually axillary or terminal, solitary or aggregated lax panicles or corymbose racemes. Flowers bisexual, pedicel slender, jointed in the upper half, epicalyx absent, calyx 5 lobed, campanulate, base connate, valvate, corolla large, 5, yellow, white, orange, sometimes with dark colored in the centre. Stamens usually shorter than petals, base wide, filaments short, anthers basifixed, usually clustered. Ovary superior, 5-20 locular, ovules 2-9 per carpel, style branched 5-40, filiform to clavate, stigma capitate. Fruit schizocarp, ovoid-subglobular, campanulate, apex biaristate or acuminate, usually black when mature, with 5-40 mericarps, dehiscent, with a slender truncate columella scar when fallen. Seed many, reniform or subreniform, smooth, glabrous or shortly pubescent.
Ganeshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
AttributionsGaneshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
Contributors
Kailash B R
StatusUNDER_CREATION
LicensesCC_BY_NC_SA
References
    Shrub
    Dr. Chandra Barooah & Iftikher Ahmed (2014) Assam Science Technology and Environment Council.
    AttributionsDr. Chandra Barooah & Iftikher Ahmed (2014) Assam Science Technology and Environment Council.
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    StatusUNDER_CREATION
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      Diagnostic Keys
      Undershrubs, ca 1.5m.
      Sanjib Barua
      AttributionsSanjib Barua
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        Description
        Habit: A medium sized shrub, upto 2m.
        Keystone Foundation
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          Habit: Shrub
          G. Renu, Sanjana Julias Thilakar, D. Narasimhan, Centre for Floristic Research, Department of Botany, Madras Christian College, Tambaram
          AttributionsG. Renu, Sanjana Julias Thilakar, D. Narasimhan, Centre for Floristic Research, Department of Botany, Madras Christian College, Tambaram
          Contributors
          StatusUNDER_CREATION
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            No Data
            📚 Nomenclature and Classification
            References
            Hort. Brit. (Sweet). ed. 1, 54. 1827
            Ganeshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
            AttributionsGaneshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
            Contributors
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              No Data
              📚 Natural History
              Cyclicity
              Flowering & Fruiting: September-April
              Ayyappan. N & V. Kokilavani, French Institute of Pondicherry, Compiled from various sources listed in the reference.
              AttributionsAyyappan. N & V. Kokilavani, French Institute of Pondicherry, Compiled from various sources listed in the reference.
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                Fl.& Fr.: September – April
                Sanjib Barua
                AttributionsSanjib Barua
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                  Reproduction
                  Abutilon species flowers are complete, bisexual, i.e., with functional male (androecium) and female (gynoecium), including stamens, carpels and ovary. Pollination is entomophilous i.e., by insects, or cleistogamy i.e., by self or allogamy i.e., by cross pollination. Flowering/Fruiting: September—April.
                  Ganeshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                  AttributionsGaneshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                  Contributors
                  StatusUNDER_CREATION
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                    Dispersal
                    Seeds may be dispersed by autochory i.e., self dispersal, anemochory i.e., wind dispersal, zoochory i.e., dispersal by birds or animals, anthropochory i.e., dispersal by humans.
                    Ganeshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                    AttributionsGaneshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                    Contributors
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                      Morphology

                      Growth Form

                      Shrub
                      Shrub
                      Annual or perennial or undershrubs, about 1-3 m tall. Stems and branches densely or sparely velutinous with simple minute stellate hairs and grayish pubescent. Leaves simple, alternate, broadly ovate to suborbicular, about 4-12 x 3.5-8.5 cm across, base cordate, margins irregularly sparsely crenate-dentate, apex acute to shallow acuminate, densely or sparsely velutinous with minute stellate simple hairs both above and beneath, petiole, densely or sparsely velutinous with minute stellate simple hairs, about 2-18 cm long, stipules subulate. Inflorescence usually axillary, solitary or aggregated lax panicles. Flowers bisexual, pedicel slender, jointed in the upper half or apex, velutinous, about 2-4 cm long, epicalyx absent, calyx 5 lobed, campanulate, base connate, valvate, divided from middle, spreading at maturity, shorter or as long as the schizocarp, about 5-8 mm across, lobes ovate, apex acute, densely pubescent with simple and stellate hairs outside, simple long hairs inside, about 5-8 mm across, corolla large, 5, yellow, sometimes with dark colored in the centre, petals obovate, glabrous, about 1.5-2.5 x 6-9 mm across. Stamens usually shorter than petals, base wide, conical, stellate hairy, about 5-7 mm long, filaments somewhat tubular, anthers basifixed, usually clustered. Ovary superior, 15-20 locular, ovules 2-9 per carpel, style branched filiform, stigma capitate. Fruit schizocarp, ovoid-subglobular, about 1.5-2.5 cm across, campanulate, apex biaristate or slightly indented, usually brownish black when mature, with 15-17 mericarps, reniform, margins stellate hairs, laterally glabrous, stellate hairy on ventral side, apex bidentate, dehiscent, shortly acuminate at apex. Seed many, reniform or subreniform, about 2-3 mm across, shortly stellate pubescent, dark brownish black.
                      Ganeshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                      AttributionsGaneshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                      Contributors
                      StatusUNDER_CREATION
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                        Shrubs, 2-3 m. Leaves ovate, base cordate, 3, 5 or 7-lobed ; petioles 1.5-12 cm ; stipules 0.5-1.5 cm, linear . Flowers axillary, solitary. Epicalyx 1.5-31-2.5 cm, ovate. Sepals ca 5 mm, cupular. Petals 3-4cm , pale yellow, obovate. Capsules 1.5-3cm across ovoid or globular, beaked
                        Sanjib Barua
                        AttributionsSanjib Barua
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                          Herbs, ca. 3 m in height; branches terete, downly tomentose; stem covered with soft velvety tomentum. Leaves simple, alternate, spiral; stipules linear ca. 2-5 mm long, petioles ca. 2-18 cm long, stellate pubescent mixed with sparse, simple, spreading hairs; lamina ca. 1.7-15 x 1-12 cm, cordate at base, acute or acuminate at apex, irregularly dentate, stellate pubescent above, grey felted beneath; palmately 5-9 nerved at base; secondary nerves 2-3 pairs. Flowers axillary, solitary, ca. 2.5 cm in diam., golden-yellow; pedicel ca. 4 cm, articulate near apex, grey stellate puberulent; calyx ca. 6-10 mm in diam., green, disk-shaped, densely grey puberulent, lobes 5, broadly ovate, apex acute, corolla uniformly yellow; petals obovate, 1-1.5 cm long and broad, claw hairy on the margin; staminal column 5-7 mm long, stellate pubescent; Schizocarps ca. 1.5-2.5 cm in diam., globular, flat or slightly indented at apex; mericarps 15-27, blackish, reniform, upper part with a short acute mucro, dorsally and ventrally stellate-hairy, laterally glabrous, smooth. Seeds 2-3, ca. 1.5-2 mm in diam., black brownish, reniform, minutely stellate-hairy or glabrescent.
                          Ayyappan. N & V. Kokilavani, French Institute of Pondicherry, Compiled from various sources listed in the reference.
                          AttributionsAyyappan. N & V. Kokilavani, French Institute of Pondicherry, Compiled from various sources listed in the reference.
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                            Flower

                            Solitary, axillary; yellow coloured. Flowering from November-January.

                            Fruit

                            A globose schizocarp, green when young, later black; mericarps 15-20, stellate hairy; seeds 3 per cell, ovoid to suborbicular, warty. Fruiting throughout the year.

                            Field tips

                            Leaves glaucous beneath.

                            Leaf Arrangement

                            Alternate-spiral

                            Leaf Type

                            Simple

                            Leaf Shape

                            Cordate

                            Leaf Apex

                            Acute-Acuminate

                            Leaf Base

                            cordate

                            Leaf Margin

                            Crenate-Dentate

                            Keystone Foundation
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                              Diseases
                              Abutilon species are susceptible to various insect pests, virus and fungi, affecting leaves, fruits and roots.
                              Ganeshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                              AttributionsGaneshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                              Contributors
                              StatusUNDER_CREATION
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                                Miscellaneous Details
                                Notes: Waste places
                                G. Renu, Sanjana Julias Thilakar, D. Narasimhan, Centre for Floristic Research, Department of Botany, Madras Christian College, Tambaram
                                AttributionsG. Renu, Sanjana Julias Thilakar, D. Narasimhan, Centre for Floristic Research, Department of Botany, Madras Christian College, Tambaram
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                                  No Data
                                  📚 Habitat and Distribution
                                  General Habitat
                                  Tropical and subtropical places as a weed, altitude up to 1200 m.
                                  Ganeshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                                  AttributionsGaneshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                                  Contributors
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                                    Waste places,hedges and forest
                                    Dr. Chandra Barooah & Iftikher Ahmed (2014) Assam Science Technology and Environment Council.
                                    AttributionsDr. Chandra Barooah & Iftikher Ahmed (2014) Assam Science Technology and Environment Council.
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                                      Description
                                      Global Distribution

                                      Asia: Afghanistan, Bhutan, China, India, Indonesia, Israel, Japan, Jordan, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand; Africa: Madagascar, Mauritius; Australasia.

                                      Local Distribution

                                      Goa, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu.

                                      Ganeshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                                      AttributionsGaneshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                                      Contributors
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                                        Global Distribution

                                        India: Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Maharastra, Nagaland, Odisha,punjab, Rajasthan

                                        Indian Distribution

                                        Bongaigaon, Darrang, Nagaon, Kamrup

                                        Dr. Chandra Barooah & Iftikher Ahmed (2014) Assam Science Technology and Environment Council.
                                        AttributionsDr. Chandra Barooah & Iftikher Ahmed (2014) Assam Science Technology and Environment Council.
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                                          Maharashtra: Kolhapur Karnataka: Belgaum, Chikmagalur, Hassan, Mysore Kerala: All districts
                                          G. Renu, Sanjana Julias Thilakar, D. Narasimhan, Centre for Floristic Research, Department of Botany, Madras Christian College, Tambaram
                                          AttributionsG. Renu, Sanjana Julias Thilakar, D. Narasimhan, Centre for Floristic Research, Department of Botany, Madras Christian College, Tambaram
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                                            Found in wastelands. Foothills to 900m.Common. Widely distributed throughout the tropics and sub tropics.
                                            Keystone Foundation
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                                              Endemic Distribution
                                              Bongaigaon, Darrang, Nagaon, Kamrup
                                              Ayyappan. N & V. Kokilavani, French Institute of Pondicherry, Compiled from various sources listed in the reference.
                                              AttributionsAyyappan. N & V. Kokilavani, French Institute of Pondicherry, Compiled from various sources listed in the reference.
                                              Contributors
                                              StatusUNDER_CREATION
                                              LicensesCC_BY
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                                                No Data
                                                📚 Occurrence
                                                No Data
                                                📚 Demography and Conservation
                                                Risk Statement
                                                Common
                                                Sanjib Barua
                                                AttributionsSanjib Barua
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                                                  Conservation Status
                                                  Not evaluated (IUCN).
                                                  Ganeshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                                                  AttributionsGaneshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
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                                                  StatusUNDER_CREATION
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                                                    Threats
                                                    Threats recoded
                                                    Sanjib Barua
                                                    AttributionsSanjib Barua
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                                                      Protection Legal Status
                                                      It is found growing wild in the tropical forest
                                                      Sanjib Barua
                                                      AttributionsSanjib Barua
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                                                        No Data
                                                        📚 Uses and Management
                                                        Uses

                                                        System of Medicines Used In

                                                        Ayurveda
                                                        Ayurveda
                                                        Folk medicine
                                                        Folk medicine
                                                        Siddha
                                                        Siddha
                                                        System Of Medicines Used In

                                                        Folk medicine, Siddha, Traditional chinese medicine

                                                        FRLHT's ENVIS Centre on Medicinal Plants: http://envis.frlht.org/plant_details.php?disp_id=2286
                                                        AttributionsFRLHT's ENVIS Centre on Medicinal Plants: http://envis.frlht.org/plant_details.php?disp_id=2286
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                                                          Leaves, bark, seed and roots used in Sidha, Ayurvedic, Unani and folk medicines.
                                                          Ganeshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
                                                          AttributionsGaneshaiah, K. N., UAS, Bangalore, India. Kailash, B. R., ATREE, Bangalore, India. Royal Norwegian Embassy grants. Indian Bioresource Information Network (IBIN), Department of Biotechnology, New Delhi, India.
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                                                            Leaves made into a chutney, when consumed helps to relieve indigestion. Fresh leaves fried in ghee and consumed with cooked rice aid in curing piles.
                                                            Keystone Foundation
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                                                              Folklore
                                                              The plant is medicinal; roots, barks and leaves are used in Ayurvedic and Unani system of medicine.
                                                              Ayyappan. N & V. Kokilavani, French Institute of Pondicherry, Compiled from various sources listed in the reference.
                                                              AttributionsAyyappan. N & V. Kokilavani, French Institute of Pondicherry, Compiled from various sources listed in the reference.
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                                                                Indigenous Information: The leaves are crushed and applied to heal sprains.
                                                                Keystone Foundation
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                                                                  No Data
                                                                  📚 Information Listing
                                                                  References
                                                                  1. D K Ved, Suma Tagadur Sureshchandra, Vijay Barve, Vijay Srinivas, Sathya Sangeetha, K. Ravikumar, Kartikeyan R., Vaibhav Kulkarni, Ajith S. Kumar, S.N. Venugopal, B. S. Somashekhar, M.V. Sumanth, Noorunissa Begum, Sugandhi Rani, Surekha K.V., and Nikhil Desale. 2016. (envis.frlht.org / frlhtenvis.nic.in). FRLHT's ENVIS Centre on Medicinal Plants, Bengaluru. http://envis.frlht.org/plant_details.php?disp_id=2286
                                                                  1. Tropicos, botanical information system at the Missouri Botanical Garden - www.tropicos.org. URL: http://tropicos.org/Name/19601227 #The International Plant Names Index (2012). Published on the Internet http://www.ipni.org. URL: http://ipni.org/ipni/simplePlantNameSearch.do;jsessionid=5F6C6C8C8CE3DEC86658D7B6A05EA241?find_wholeName=Abutilon+indicum&output_format=normal&query_type=by_query&back_page=query_ipni.html #The Plant List (2010). Version 1. Published on the Internet; http://www.theplantlist.org/ URL: http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/search?q=Abutilon+indicum #Catalogue of Life: 2015 Annual Checklist. URL: http://www.catalogueoflife.org/col/details/species/id/fefedafc833f13b57d181c05cc74a733 #Harvard University Herbaria, Publication and Botanist databases (HUH) © 2001 - 2013 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College.Flora of China, 'eFloras (2008). Published on the Internet http://www.efloras.org [accessed 12 April 2014]*' Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, MO & #Harvard University Herbaria, Cambridge, MA. URL: http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=200013676 #Birgitta Bremer et. al. (2009): An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG III. From Bot. J. Linn. Soc. 105-121. #Mark W. chase and James L. Reveal (2009): A Phylogenetic classification of the land plants to accompany APG III. From Bot. J. Linn. Soc. 122-127. #Saxena, N. B. & Shamindra Saxena (2001) Plant Taxonomy. Reprint by Pragati Prakashan, Meerut, Uttar Pradesh. 224-228.#Hooker, J. D., (1872) Flora of British India. Reprint by Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh, Publishers, Dehra Dun. 1: 326. #Sharma, B. D., Balakrishnan, N. P., Rao, R. R., & Hajra, P. K. (1993), Flora of India, Botanical Survey of India. Deep Printers, New Delhi. Vol. 3: 266. #ENVIS Centre for Medicinal Plants. (FRLHT) URL: http://envis.frlht.org/bot_search.php #Encyclopedia of Life. Available from http://www.eol.org. Accessed 15 Jan 2014.#IUCN 2013. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2013.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 27 November 2016. #Plant reproductive morphology. (2014, November 17). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 08:57, April 9, 2015, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Plant_sexual_morphology&oldid=539322400#Seed dispersal. (2015, March 29). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 08:59, April 9, 2015, from, URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Seed_dispersal&oldid=572442927License*:
                                                                  1. Singh, N.P., Chauhan, A.S., Mondal, M.S. 2000. Flora of Manipur: Vol. I: 133. Botanical Survey of India, Calcutta
                                                                  2. Pal, G.D. 2013. Flora of Arunachal Pradesh: Vol. I: 165. Botanical Survey of India, Calcutta
                                                                  3. Deb, D.B. 1981. pp-3297 The Flora of Tripura State: Vol I. Botanical Survey of India, Indian Botanic Garden, Howrah.
                                                                  4. Sharma, B.D., Sanjappa, M. 1993. Flora of India: Vol. III: 266. Botanical Survey of India, Calcutta
                                                                  1. Flora of Karnataka, Sharma B. D, 1984, Biodiversity Documentation for Kerala Part 6: Flowering Plants, N. Sasidharan, 2004, Flora of Kolhapur District, Yadav S. R & Sardesai M. M, 2002
                                                                  Information Listing > References
                                                                  1. D K Ved, Suma Tagadur Sureshchandra, Vijay Barve, Vijay Srinivas, Sathya Sangeetha, K. Ravikumar, Kartikeyan R., Vaibhav Kulkarni, Ajith S. Kumar, S.N. Venugopal, B. S. Somashekhar, M.V. Sumanth, Noorunissa Begum, Sugandhi Rani, Surekha K.V., and Nikhil Desale. 2016. (envis.frlht.org / frlhtenvis.nic.in). FRLHT's ENVIS Centre on Medicinal Plants, Bengaluru. http://envis.frlht.org/plant_details.php?disp_id=2286
                                                                  2. Tropicos, botanical information system at the Missouri Botanical Garden - www.tropicos.org. URL: http://tropicos.org/Name/19601227 #The International Plant Names Index (2012). Published on the Internet http://www.ipni.org. URL: http://ipni.org/ipni/simplePlantNameSearch.do;jsessionid=5F6C6C8C8CE3DEC86658D7B6A05EA241?find_wholeName=Abutilon+indicum&output_format=normal&query_type=by_query&back_page=query_ipni.html #The Plant List (2010). Version 1. Published on the Internet; http://www.theplantlist.org/ URL: http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/search?q=Abutilon+indicum #Catalogue of Life: 2015 Annual Checklist. URL: http://www.catalogueoflife.org/col/details/species/id/fefedafc833f13b57d181c05cc74a733 #Harvard University Herbaria, Publication and Botanist databases (HUH) © 2001 - 2013 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College.Flora of China, 'eFloras (2008). Published on the Internet http://www.efloras.org [accessed 12 April 2014]*' Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, MO & #Harvard University Herbaria, Cambridge, MA. URL: http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=200013676 #Birgitta Bremer et. al. (2009): An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG III. From Bot. J. Linn. Soc. 105-121. #Mark W. chase and James L. Reveal (2009): A Phylogenetic classification of the land plants to accompany APG III. From Bot. J. Linn. Soc. 122-127. #Saxena, N. B. & Shamindra Saxena (2001) Plant Taxonomy. Reprint by Pragati Prakashan, Meerut, Uttar Pradesh. 224-228.#Hooker, J. D., (1872) Flora of British India. Reprint by Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh, Publishers, Dehra Dun. 1: 326. #Sharma, B. D., Balakrishnan, N. P., Rao, R. R., & Hajra, P. K. (1993), Flora of India, Botanical Survey of India. Deep Printers, New Delhi. Vol. 3: 266. #ENVIS Centre for Medicinal Plants. (FRLHT) URL: http://envis.frlht.org/bot_search.php #Encyclopedia of Life. Available from http://www.eol.org. Accessed 15 Jan 2014.#IUCN 2013. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2013.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 27 November 2016. #Plant reproductive morphology. (2014, November 17). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 08:57, April 9, 2015, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Plant_sexual_morphology&oldid=539322400#Seed dispersal. (2015, March 29). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 08:59, April 9, 2015, from, URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Seed_dispersal&oldid=572442927License*:
                                                                  3. Singh, N.P., Chauhan, A.S., Mondal, M.S. 2000. Flora of Manipur: Vol. I: 133. Botanical Survey of India, Calcutta
                                                                  4. Pal, G.D. 2013. Flora of Arunachal Pradesh: Vol. I: 165. Botanical Survey of India, Calcutta
                                                                  5. Deb, D.B. 1981. pp-3297 The Flora of Tripura State: Vol I. Botanical Survey of India, Indian Botanic Garden, Howrah.
                                                                  6. Sharma, B.D., Sanjappa, M. 1993. Flora of India: Vol. III: 266. Botanical Survey of India, Calcutta
                                                                  7. Flora of Karnataka, Sharma B. D, 1984, Biodiversity Documentation for Kerala Part 6: Flowering Plants, N. Sasidharan, 2004, Flora of Kolhapur District, Yadav S. R & Sardesai M. M, 2002

                                                                  Indigenous Knowledge on Medicinal Flora Utilized by the Traditional Healers in Mappillaiyurani Village, Tuticorin District, Tamil Nadu, India

                                                                  Dr. V. Vadivel
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