I think a species of *Melilotus. *May be *M. albus* Very interesting plant.
I have a humble request to all members who seek/request id of plants. Please provide more information related to the plant and its habitat. If you are reluctant in following the format of our group, please give information related to your plants as points or a short write up. Without having supporting information, there are chances for wrong identification. I do not think that it is too much of pain or takes too much of your time to include additional information such as Place, date, habitat, habit of plant, approximate height of plant, information on leaves, whether plant was hairy or sooth (through out or only on leaves) etc. In the case of this post, it is very difficult to assume (assumption of these aspect would lead to wrong id) whether it is a herb, climber, shrub and whether it is in open area or in shade, wild or cultivated etc. No information on the place where it is seen, which is important in case of endemics. I, sometime, take hours together to run the key in flora to id plants. I think others, who try id the plants, also do the same when we get a confusing/new specimen. If someone takes pain for identification, can't we think of reducing that pain, at least a bit. When seeing a post without information no chance for us (all other members who are new that particular species) to learn further about the species as well. Earlier, I use to make notes on plants that are new to me. Now, most of the uploads are posting without additional information and no chance of knowing or learning further, that is frustrating. Thanks and Regards, Giby On 26 February 2012 20:02, tanveer khan <[email protected]> wrote: > It is belongs to family Fabaceae > I think it is Indigofera sp? > Indigofera trita? > -- GIBY KURIAKOSE PhD Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE), Royal Enclave, Jakkur Post, Srirampura Bangalore- 560064 India Phone - +91 9448714856 (Mobile) visit my pictures @ http://www.flickr.com/photos/giby

