Thanks Surajit for showing additional leaves

yes that sort of helps with kew herbarium

but I never had doubts about your ID

usha di

On Thu, Feb 26, 2015 at 7:35 AM, surajit koley <
[email protected]> wrote:

> What a write up Didi, only you can do this!
>
> Yes, Didi, I too have broader leaves, attached here a few more
> photographs. The plant bears variously shaped lamina, some are falcate too.
> KEW herb. no. K000900622 (the one with pods) is from Maynmar and the other
> one is from India.
>
> I went through all vigna, phaseolus, teramnus and others described in FBI.
> First, I thought it to be a *Teramnus*. However, the pod and seed size
> and colour and hairs, shiny surface of seeds all tally only with the ID I
> have suggested.
>
> Thank you very very much.
> Regards
> surajit
>
>
> On Thu, Feb 26, 2015 at 4:58 AM, Ushadi Micromini <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> nice
>> yes to your query based on your refs..except for the kew herbarium ( i
>> think their leaves a re a bit broader, may be a case of younger or older
>> leaves )
>> thanks for showing
>>
>> But I hope you will by now have surmised that all those old books are
>> just that...old
>>
>> to be used as a springboard..
>> to id
>>  to wonder
>>
>> but the current data will be different
>> as you yourself are proving to us
>> day in and day out..
>> things change
>> plants migrate ...
>> by water, sea, river
>>  floods waves tsunami
>> by wind .. during slight breeze even
>> or thunderstorms and hurricanes ..where winds carry enormously weighted
>> objects
>>
>> by animals .. on their skin  in their gut
>> or hummans .. via ll of the above clothes and by design
>> by carrying the seeds  with premeditated design as in mass migration of
>> dandelion we saw in north america..
>> or wheat as we know it
>> or ganja that go to europe
>> the list must be thousands of name long..
>>
>> or neem and basmati chawal and turmeric and countless others that were
>> planted to study, steal patent rights or
>>  belated knowledge and new found openness as in case of the sajne danta
>> gaach..now that the world has discovered the protein content in the young
>> leaves and  activity  beneficial to kidneys in the green pods as
>> vegetables...
>>
>> does not matter if prain does not say it occurs in bengal...
>>
>> *you showed it does*
>>
>> *and that's what matters to me*
>> and I am sure BSI in its modern avatar will show it or has shown it and
>> we are not privy to all their literature. I dont know why they make their
>> literature soooo difficult to get hold of or sooo expensive when BSI is a
>> public venture????
>>
>>
>>
>> phew enough said
>>
>> be well
>> Usha di
>>
>> On Tue, Feb 24, 2015 at 10:27 PM, surajit koley <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Since I started photographing local flora for this group I have come
>>> across several species which are supposedly not to be found in this region
>>> of West Bengal, even though they are listed in 'Bengal Plants'. Today I
>>> have recorded two species one of which I have already posted a little while
>>> ago.
>>>
>>> This is a wild twiner in village thicket. Leaves are hairy on both
>>> surfaces. I am not sure if those can be called villous or pilose or
>>> something else. For the past two hours I went through Prain, Haines, Hooker
>>> and Roxburgh. The closest match I could find is *Vigna pilosa* Baker.
>>> Now, leguminosae is a big family. So, it is before you if there is more
>>> common probability.
>>>
>>> Thank you
>>> Regards
>>> surajit
>>>
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>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Usha di
>> ===========
>>
>
>


-- 
Usha di
===========

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