Nice work Satish ji. I tried to count the total taxa using your data. For convenience I changed the format, and used 'Subtotal' function in Excel. As per this, your compilation shows *207* unique taxa, coming under *77 *genera. Few repeated names were deleted. Crotalaria has highest number of taxa (19), followed by Indigofera and Desmodium, 15 & 14, respectively. 39 genera have single species in each. Please view the attached file, which has 3 worksheets. Hope this helps.
Regards Vijayasankar Raman National Center for Natural Products Research University of Mississippi On Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 9:35 AM, Dinesh Valke <[email protected]>wrote: > Satish ji ... apologies ! I am real bad at Excel's mathematics and > formulae. > Am sure someone in our group is good at this, and would help Satish ji. > Regards. > Dinesh > > > > > > On Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 8:57 PM, Satish Phadke <[email protected]>wrote: > >> Dnesh ji >> After using the COUNTA function correctly to count the total filled cells >> in the Excell sheet the number comes to 362 rather than 280. Will you >> please recheck? >> Crotalaria has maximum species : 21; Indigofera : 16; Desmodium >> :15;Vigna: 10; Smithia :9; Erythrina: 8; Dalbergia: 7; Alysicarpus :6; >> Trifolium: 6; Tephrosia:6 ;Medicago :6; >> In 35 genera only one species each was discussed. >> Some plants esp. posted by Raju ji and Ritesh ji from Andaman and North >> east remain to be unidentified. >> >> On Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 8:34 PM, Dinesh Valke <[email protected]>wrote: >> >>> Nice way of summarizing the week's collection, Satish ji. >>> Regards. >>> Dinesh >>> >>> >>> >>> On Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 8:29 PM, Satish Phadke <[email protected]>wrote: >>> >>>> 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 >>>> >>> >>> >> >> >> -- >> Dr Satish Phadke >> > >
Papilionaceae week ITP-1.xlsx
Description: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet

