Hello all
it is for Sure Sonneratia apetala.
the 4 fleshy spreading calyx in fruit and the umbrella-shaped stigm
aclearly points out towards Sonneratia apetala.
it can be found ocassionaly along the Mumbai coast.

Regards
Satish Pardeshi

On Jul 13, 12:15 pm, Tabish <[email protected]> wrote:
> PS: Sorry for my word-swapping typo! I meant, "apetala" means it has
> no petals - it only has 4 sepals :-)
>   - Tabish
>
> On Jul 13, 12:11 pm, Tabish <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > As Pravin pointed out, this should be  Sonneratia mangrove (Sonneratia
> > apetala)
> >  "apetala" means it has no sepals - it only has 4 petals, And a very
> > interesting pistil with stigma looking like a mushroom!
> >    http://www.flowersofindia.net/catalog/slides/Sonneratia%20Mangrove.html
> >    - Tabish
>
> > On Jul 13, 11:16 am, Pankaj Kumar <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > This is a call for Dr. Jatinder Chadha,..........please reply
> > > Isnt this plant the one you were showing from Sikkim....so most
> > > probably this is not necessarily a mangrove plant!!!
> > > Pankaj

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