Panax pseudo-ginseng Wall. (Araliaceae) has its distribution extended up to 
Kumaon (eastern region of Uttarakhand; Garhwal being western region). I 
have seen it in Sunderdhunga valley between (about) 2000-2500m in forest. 
Based on this sighting it appeared rare in Uttarakhand, may be also due to 
its westernmost limit here.
DSRawat Pantnagar

On Monday, February 27, 2017 at 9:52:50 AM UTC+5:30, JM Garg wrote:
>
> Thanks a lot,  Chadwell ji
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: "C CHADWELL" <[email protected]>
> Date: 27 Feb 2017 3:56 a.m.
> Subject: Himalayan Ginseng (Panax pseudo-ginseng) at fruting stage in 
> Eastern Himalaya
> To: "J.M. Garg" <[email protected]>
> Cc: 
>
> I attach 2 images scanned in from slides taken by P.Curzon in Eastern 
> Nepal of
> Himalayan Ginseng in fruit.
>
> Flowers of Himalaya record P.pseudo-ginseng Wall. from forests & 
> shrubberies @
> 2100-4300m from Central Nepal to SW China and Myanamar.
>
> They mention nothing of it being rare - indeed it is unlikely to have been 
> included
> in their guide had it been so.  There is a line drawing. Nothing said of 
> variants.
>
> Enumeration of the Flowering Plants of Nepal has subspecies pseudo-ginseng,
> which is apparently confined to Nepal, subspecies himalaicus which is 
> further
> divided into var. himalaicus, var. angustifolius & var. bipinnatifidus.
>
> Flora of Bhutan (Vol. 2 Part I, 1991) which covers Araliaceae records the 
> species
> in coniferous forest in Darjeeling, Sikkim, Chumbi & Bhutan @ 1500-3650m.
>
> The authors describe this as an important species in traditional 
> medicine.  The typical
> subspecies pseudo-ginseng with short rhizomes & carrot-like roots has not 
> been recorded
> from Bhutan or Sikkim.
>
> Whereas the variant found in Bhutan & Sikkim have long creeping nodular 
> rhizomes, 
> segregated as subsp. himalaicus Hara.
>
> This has been further subdivided into: var. bipinnatifidus (Seemann) 
> Li with pinnatifid leaflets 
> with sharply incised lobes; and var. angustifolius (Burkill) Li - the 
> latter is widespread in Bhutan,
> Darjeeling and Sikkim.  One of these varieties was considered a superior 
> for, one the inferior
> form, in Bhutanese Medicine.
>
> I know this medicinal plant from my time as a consultant to The Royal 
> Government of Bhutan in
> the 1990s.  I saw it growing in forest in Central Bhutan.  Cultivation 
> trials were already underway
> when I first visited Bhutan.  
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Best Wishes,
>
>
> Chris Chadwell
>
>
> 81 Parlaunt Road 
> SLOUGH
> SL3 8BE
> UK
>
> www.shpa.org.uk
>
>
>
>
>

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