The plant posted by Usha is not Capparis moonii. C. moonii doesnt have as big spines plus the spines are always paired in Capparis. The spines are solitary in this species. Its most likely to be Paramignya monophylla.
navendu On Sep 7, 6:21 am, tanay bose <[email protected]> wrote: > Nice catch of Capparis moonii by Usha Ji and Neil Ji > Tanay > > > > On Mon, Sep 6, 2010 at 10:35 PM, Neil Soares <[email protected]> wrote: > > Hi, > > Agree with Dr.Kadus. This is Capparis moonii. Sending some of my > > photographs. > > With regards, > > Neil Soares. > > > --- On *Mon, 9/6/10, Dr. Arvind Kadus <[email protected]>* wrote: > > > From: Dr. Arvind Kadus <[email protected]> > > Subject: [efloraofindia:46690] Re: Tree id pl. > > To: "efloraofindia" <[email protected]> > > Cc: [email protected] > > Date: Monday, September 6, 2010, 9:00 PM > > > Page Madam is it Capparis mooni? or Capparis sp. ? > > Thanx, > > Dr.Kadus Arvind,Pune > > > On Sep 6, 8:03 pm, ushaprabha page > > <[email protected]<http://us.mc339.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected]>> > > wrote: > > > Tree id pl. > > > habitat -wild. It was still growing. height 10 feet. > > > having long thorns. leaves -no smell. > > > > P9040043.JPG > > > 190KViewDownload > > > > P9040044.JPG > > > 137KViewDownload > > -- > Tanay Bose > Research Assistant & Teaching Assistant > Department of Botany > University of British Columbia > 3529-6270 University Blvd. > Vancouver, B.C. V6T 1Z4 (Canada) > Phone: 778-323-4036

