--
With regards,
J. M. Garg

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: JM Garg <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, 15 Jun, 2013, 6:40 pm
Subject: [efloraofindia:157736] Fwd: Asteraceae for id 040410MK1
To: efloraofindia <[email protected]>, Muthu Karthick <
[email protected]>, Vijayasankar Raman <[email protected]>,
Gurcharan Singh <[email protected]>, D. S Rawat <
[email protected]>, Shrikant Ingalhalikar <
[email protected]>, Dinesh Valke <[email protected]>,
Nidhan Singh <[email protected]>, grassman <[email protected]>,
<[email protected]>, Joshi Pankaj <[email protected]>, Rajendra Shinde
<[email protected]>


Forwarding again for Id confirmation or otherwise please.

Some earlier relevant feedback:

 May be Pluchea lanceolata
Satish Chile
 I also hope this plant is *Pluchea lanceolata* (DC.) C. B. Clarke
...............
Regards
Tanay

 I wish to differ from Pluchea lanceolata on account of following-
1. It is not an undershrub, instead it is 2.5 tall shrub
2. Leaves are not sessile and oblong, they are petiolate and elliptic
The plant is recorded to the north of gangetic plains.
I feel that the plant is Vernonia divergens Edgew. Regards, Shrikant
 Mind the other characters of V.devergens i.e. Leaves in the upper
branches, flowering twigs small....heads in much brached penicled
corymbs....verify please
Satish

 Not Pluchea lanceolata for sure, the leaves are much broader than that. I
am uploading my specimens of Pluchea lanceolata.
-- 
Dr. Gurcharan Singh

 I think it is Vernonia sp.
With regards
R. Vijayasankar

 Not *Pluchea lanceolata*, because we have confirm specimen of said species.
It must be member of *Vernonia?*
Regards
Pankaj

 can be Phuclea, NOT P. lanceolata. teh branches and leaves are similar to
Pluchea.
Regards
Satish Pardeshi

  it may be pluchea odorata

 *http://w3.biosci.utexas.edu/prc/specimens/img/txu-herb-00009058.JPG*
<http://w3.biosci.utexas.edu/prc/specimens/img/txu-herb-00009058.JPG>

- from Dr. Anil Kumar ji.

You seem to have got the correct identity
It does appear like Pluchea odorata.
-- 
Dr. Gurcharan Singh

 Just a point of observation..Original photograph - leaves have short
petiole. Herbarium specimen shows longer petiole.
Inflorescence in photograph looks axillary as well as terminal, while in
the herbarium sheet - it looks terminal.
Rajendra





On Wednesday, April 7, 2010 4:18:23 PM UTC+5:30, Muthu Karthick, N wrote:

> Dear all,
> Please help to identify this Asteraceae member. I have seen this in a dry
> scrub forest at an altitude of 1000 - 1100 msl. I could not take good
> photographs of it.
>
> *Date/Time-*
>
> 24-02-2010 / 04:00 PM
>
> *Location- Place, Altitude, GPS-*
>
> Satyamangalam; 1000 msl; TN
>
> *Habitat-** Garden**/ Urban/ Wild/ Type-*
>
> rocky dry location
>
> *Plant Habit-*
>
> tall shrub;
>
> *Height/Length-*
>
> Up to 2.5metre
>
> *Leaves Type/ Shape/ Size-*
>
> Leaves elliptic-obovate; up to 6cm long, little scabrous
>
> *Inflorescence Type/ Size-*
>
> pale violet colored; Terminal heads of umbel; 5-8cm long
>
> *Flowers Size/ Colour/ Calyx/ Bracts-*
>
>
> *Fruits Type/ Shape/ Size Seeds- *
>
> *Other Information like Fragrance, Pollinator, Uses etc.- *
>
>
>
> --
> Muthu Karthick, N
> Junior Research Fellow
> Care Earth Trust
> Chennai - 61
> www.careearthtrust.org
>
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