Sorry for the delay.
I wanted to compile all the data much earlier.
Luckily I am happy to post it here before the end of the month November
2011.
Attaching an excel file containing the names of all the plants from
Papilionaceae discussed during the Family week.
Neglecting some minor mistakes or errors due to repetition of synonym etc
we roughly discuused 77 genera during the week and 280 species.
This includes a large number of plants mainly form Western ghats, Himalayan
plants, plants from Jammu and Kashmir,HP,U,.Karnataka,Odisha,Tamil
nadu,Bengal as well as some from USA and Australia.
We had some really unusual contributions from Andaman and Northeast India
too. Some of which still remain unidentified. Vijaysankar ji cntributed
some unusual plants from his collections too. Ushaprabha ji was in
Australia at that time so we were lucky to see some plants from there too.
Thanks and Regards
Dr Satish Phadke

On Mon, Nov 7, 2011 at 12:15 PM, Satish Phadke <[email protected]> wrote:

> Very good start. Fabaceae is a big family. Its presence is almost
> everywhere mostly tropical and warm temperate Asia and America.
> I am sure each member will come up at least with few species.
> The record on my mail shows that Gurcharan ji posted his mails 2min before
> the start of the 7th Nov 2011 to reach it on The day. I posted a minute
> later.
>
> Till 12 noon today (That is in 12 hrs) I have some 80 mails with the label
> *Fabaceae-Faboideae (Papilionaceae) Week* in my inbox*
>
> Great going indeed . For those who don't know: one can copy paste this
> heading from here for uniformity of mails. You can add a label to track the
> mails under this heading if you are using Gmail.
> Regards
> *Dr Satish Phadke
> http://satishphadke.blogspot.com/ <http://www.satishphadke.blogspot.com>
>
> --
> Dr Satish Phadke
>



-- 
Dr Satish Phadke

Attachment: Papilionaceae week ITP.xlsx
Description: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet

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