it matches well with Porpax jerdoniana
navendu
On Aug 14, 11:31 pm, Gurcharan Singh singh...@gmail.com wrote:
To me also Macodes looks a better option, as also suggested by Pankaj Oudhia
ji
--
Dr. Gurcharan Singh
Retired Associate Professor
SGTB Khalsa College, University of Delhi, Delhi
Very nice pictures jayesh
navendu
On Aug 16, 7:24 pm, jayesh patil jayesh...@gmail.com wrote:
Thank you everyone :)
Strangely there was only one specimen of this tree in that location.
The fragrance was heavenly, that's how we were able to find the plant.
- Jayesh
On Aug 16, 6:12 pm
Leaves look like Oxyria digyna
navendu
On Aug 17, 4:23 pm, Thiruvengadam Ekambaram ethiruvenga...@gmail.com
wrote:
Friends
I took this plant picture in Bhojwasa, Uttarakhand
It was among rocks
Date/Time-8.7.10 2.02p.m.
Location- Place, Altitude, GPS- --- in Bhojwasa
Habitat
Its certainly Caryopteris, most probably wallichiana
navendu
On Aug 17, 7:02 am, Gurcharan Singh singh...@gmail.com wrote:
Tanay pl compare it with the plant of Mani ji and this one on FOI
http://www.flowersofindia.net/catalog/slides/Bluebeard.html
--
Dr. Gurcharan Singh
Retired
I agree, Ficus gibbosa
navendu
On Aug 18, 7:35 am, Vijayasankar vijay.botan...@gmail.com wrote:
*Ficus *species, may be F. parasitica.
With regards
Vijayasankar
On Tue, Aug 17, 2010 at 4:16 AM, renee vyas vyas reneevy...@gmail.comwrote:
Dear Friends,
One more for Id from North Goa
Arisaema jacquemontii
navendu
On Aug 18, 11:48 am, Thiruvengadam Ekambaram
ethiruvenga...@gmail.com wrote:
Friends
I took this plant picture in Chopta Sanctuary(Kedarnath Musk Deer Sanctuary)
Uttarakhand
This plant is interesting because it is like snake
Date/Time-13.7.10 4.10
Dendropthoe falcata var amplexicaulis as described in Flora of Bombay
navendu
On Aug 19, 5:05 pm, arvind kadus agastiayur...@yahoo.co.in wrote:
ID Request please..
Dr. kadus arvind,Pune.
IMG_4998A.JPG
137KViewDownload
IMG_5000A.JPG
114KViewDownload
Caesalpinia crista
navendu
On Aug 19, 4:54 pm, arvind kadus agastiayur...@yahoo.co.in wrote:
Hi, All,
This plant was found at Veldur, Guhagar. Travelling from Dabhol to Guhagar
via Getty. Near to Sea. Small bushy climber having spikes, yellow flowers,
pods as in the picture.
Please Id
Yes, these are male flowers of Mallotus, most probably aureopunctatus
or stenanthus
navendu
On Aug 23, 4:18 pm, Dr Santhosh Kumar drsanthosh1...@gmail.com
wrote:
It seems to be Mallotus sp. (male flowers)
santhosh
On 14 June 2010 17:43, Pravin Kawale kawale.pra...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi
What are the chances of it being a Broussonetia, just a thought, its
too big to be a Morus alba but then if its that old then likely it
could get that big.
navendu
On Aug 25, 2:07 am, tanay bose tanaybos...@gmail.com wrote:
*t looks like Morus alba to me too*
*Tanay*
On Tue, Aug 24, 2010
Casearia most probably graveolens
navendu
On Aug 24, 7:55 am, Gurcharan Singh singh...@gmail.com wrote:
Resurfacing again for ID confirmation
Earlier feedback
Satish Phadke ji.I think
*Flacourtia
indica* has more number of stamens than depicted
Lovely flowers and nice picture
navendu
On Aug 27, 7:39 am, shubhada nikharge shubhada_nikha...@yahoo.co.in
wrote:
Satish ji,
Nice pics as usual. Thanx very much for sharing.
do u know the local name of this tree?
Cheers,
Shubhada
I am only one; but still I am one. I cannot do everything
Looks like some species of Cordia . It could be C.macleodii
navendu
On Aug 27, 11:32 pm, Vijayasankar vijay.botan...@gmail.com wrote:
Pl check it for *Eriolaena*.
With regards
Vijayasankar
On Fri, Aug 27, 2010 at 12:49 PM, arvind kadus
agastiayur...@yahoo.co.inwrote:
Today
Shrikant ji, Thank you for confirming :)
navendu
On Aug 28, 3:23 pm, shrikant ingalhalikar le...@rediffmail.com
wrote:
Navendu ji, you are right. It was Cordia macleodii. Regards, Shrikant
On Aug 27, 11:32 pm, Vijayasankar vijay.botan...@gmail.com wrote:
Pl check it for *Eriolaena
I agree with Mr. Senthilkumar, it does look very much like F.
amplissima
navendu
On Sep 4, 7:13 pm, Pankaj Kumar sahanipan...@gmail.com wrote:
Ficus virens by any chance.
Pankaj
***
TAXONOMISTS GETTING EXTINCT AND SPECIES DATA DEFICIENT
The leaves of C.bulbosa are extremely variable. They vary from being
broad elliptic lanceolate to very narrow linear lanceolate. I think
based on these some people even treat these as different varieties.
navendu
On Sep 5, 9:56 am, sugandha shetye sudhashe...@gmail.com wrote:
This looks like
I strongly feel its some species of Terminalia. If I am not mistaken
there are a few similar trees planted in FRI dehradun. Someone can
find out the species from there.
navendu
On Sep 5, 2:26 am, Shantanu shnt...@gmail.com wrote:
Sorry...it will be 7000 feet.
It was seen on the way to Algarah
Yes H.furcifera seems to be a different species. I have seen both
these species and the flowers are quite different.
navendu
On Sep 5, 12:36 am, Pankaj Kumar sahanipan...@gmail.com wrote:
I rechecked and found that the last plant is not Habenaria furcifera
but Habenaria ovalifolia Wight
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 tanaybos...@gmail.com wrote:
Nice catch
stamens. R.notonianum has 4 perfect stamens
while R.obliqum has 2.
navendu
On Sep 7, 10:12 am, Tabish tabi...@gmail.com wrote:
You can also compare with the pics in this thread:
http://groups.google.co.in/group/indiantreepix/browse_thread/thread/a...
And one more link:
http
As mentioned in the earlier thread, Tabish may have a point here. Can
someone please get the flower specimens and check the number of
perfect stamens.
notonianum if 4
obliqum if 2
navendu
On Sep 6, 10:57 am, Tabish tabi...@gmail.com wrote:
This should be Rhynchoglossum notonianum
I think F.roxburgii and F. auriculata are the synonyms for the same
species
navendu
On Sep 6, 10:04 am, ulachungpa ulachun...@gmail.com wrote:
We have a similar looking tree, a Ficus roxburghii in Sikkim which is
grown as a popular fodder tree.
Perhaps you could check it out.
Regards,
Usha
though. Sorry for that
navendu
On Sep 8, 11:58 pm, Tabish tabi...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Navendu,
The flowers in your picture look unmistakably like those of Tarenna
asiatica in this picture
http://www.biotik.org/india/species/t/tareasia/tareasia_17_en.html
and others in these links
http
unid 1 3 - Tephrosia sp
unid 2 - Crotalaria sp
unid 4 - Cyanotis fasciculata
unid 5 - Anisochilus sp
navendu
On Sep 18, 8:10 pm, Parjanya guru gurooji1...@gmail.com wrote:
For* unid_5_WF.jpg.,*
* .. I guess ... a species of Anisochilus.*
* May be A. carosus..???*
**
.. And Rahul
Its very likely to be Adenia hondala, but the leaf seems deformed,
should be three lobed like a Passiflora leaf.
On Sep 19, 6:31 pm, J.M. Garg jmga...@gmail.com wrote:
Forwarding again for Id assistance pl.
Earlier relevant feedback:
“*Could it be Adenia hondala?*
With regards
or could be Lomatogonium
navendu
On Sep 28, 10:39 pm, Gurcharan Singh singh...@gmail.com wrote:
Perhaps Swertia sp.
--
Dr. Gurcharan Singh
Retired Associate Professor
SGTB Khalsa College, University of Delhi, Delhi-110007
Res: 932 Anand Kunj, Vikas Puri, New Delhi-110018.
Phone: 011
I think its Nathopodytes nimmoniana
navendu
On Oct 2, 10:09 am, shobha chavda koa...@gmail.com wrote:
Request for ID – 021010SC1
Dear All,
Posting a photo for Id of plant.
Date / Time – 21st Aug. 2010 / 10.00 am.
Location – Place /Altitude / GPS – Amboli,Maharashtra
Habitat – Garden
the leaves are clustered at the end of the branches and are not
opposite, so it should be Mappia foetida.
navendu
On Oct 5, 11:54 pm, tanay bose tanaybos...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Arvind Ji,
I think your plant is Nothapodytes nimmoniana but having holes in the leaves
is not diagonistic
Could be Persea macrantha
navendu
On Oct 8, 10:17 pm, Gurcharan Singh singh...@gmail.com wrote:
Resurfacing again for ID
--
Dr. Gurcharan Singh
Retired Associate Professor
SGTB Khalsa College, University of Delhi, Delhi-110007
Res: 932 Anand Kunj, Vikas Puri, New Delhi-110018.
Phone
I had identified this as Nepeta royleana, it will be nice if someone
could validate
navendu
On Oct 10, 9:21 pm, Gurcharan Singh singh...@gmail.com wrote:
Really interesting
Tried to fix it but could not yet.
--
Dr. Gurcharan Singh
Retired Associate Professor
SGTB Khalsa College
I think this is Chrysanthemum pyrethroides
navendu
On Oct 13, 9:55 am, Gurcharan Singh singh...@gmail.com wrote:
Waldheimia tomentosa (syn: Allardia tomentosa) has white tomentose leaves,
not in this plant. Tanacetum stoliczkae (syn: Allardia stoliczkae) has
glabrous leaves. The two
Delphinium brunoniana?
navendu
On Oct 12, 11:19 pm, Nudrat Sayed nudrat@gmail.com wrote:
Hello All,
Please help with identification of this plant. Is it possible that this
plant belongs Aconitum sps.
--
Regards
Dr. Sayed Nudrat Zawar
32a.jpg
224KViewDownload
32b.jpg
I think its a species of Premna
navendu
On Nov 5, 11:12 pm, Padmini Raghavan padi...@gmail.com wrote:
The trunk has such a distinctive pattern that I hope someone will be able to
throw some light on its id.
(The pics of Gmelina arborea show a smooth trunk.)
Thanks,
Padmini Raghavan
You should also check under the genus Uraria
navendu
On Nov 9, 2:37 am, Gurcharan Singh singh...@gmail.com wrote:
Resurfacing again for ID
Earlier feedback
Pardeshi ji..I t
seems to me more an Alysicarpus species than Desmodium
Dimocarpus longan
navendu
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THis looks like Sapindus emarginatus
navendu
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Looks like Crataeva religiosa
navendu
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Why not U.graminifolia?
navendu
On Dec 2, 8:12 am, Nayan Singh ns_dungri...@yahoo.co.in wrote:
Thanks Garg ji for your continuous efforts
Thanks Milind ji for your response
at present i have not collected any part
i will try to take pic of the other parts
thanks again
Nayan
Reminds me of Xylopleurum rosea
navendu
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I does look a lot like Sapium insigne
navendu
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looks like barleria terminalis
navendu
On Jan 29, 9:11 pm, Aarti S. Khale aarti.kh...@gmail.com wrote:
Again picture taken on the 1st of December at Mahabaleshwar.
Help in identifying this Barleria type.
Regards,
Aarti Khale
You have been sent 1 picture.
DSCN9319.JPG
These pictures
Holigarna grahamii
navendu
On Jan 29, 9:04 pm, Aarti S. Khale aarti.kh...@gmail.com wrote:
Picture taken on the 1st of Dec, 09 at Mahabaleshwar.
Kindly help in identifying please.
Regards,
Aarti khale
P1080413.JPG
These pictures were sent with Picasa, from Google.
Try it out here:http
More like Couroupita guianensis
navendu
On Feb 13, 6:16 am, Devendra Bhardwaj devendra_bhard...@yahoo.com
wrote:
Gargji,
Leaves and stem shows that Crescentia alata .
Regard
Devendra
From: J.M. Garg jmga...@gmail.com
To: efloraofindia
This is actually a member of family Gesneriaceae. I have been trying
to id this species for quite some time.
navendu
On Feb 15, 11:08 am, Pravir Deshmukh prav...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Friends
Please help for the ID
The plant is recorded from the West Kamang Dist of Arunachal in the month
Cassine glauca?
navendu
On Feb 16, 9:51 pm, Rakesh Biswas rakesh7bis...@gmail.com wrote:
Date/Time- Feb 16
Location- Place, Altitude, GPS- Bhopal: near sea level
Habitat- Garden/ Urban/ Wild/ Type- Wild near the lakeside in front of a
urban habitat
Plant Habit- Tree/ Shrub/ Climber/ Herb
Looks like Swietenia mahagoni
navendu
On Feb 22, 2:36 pm, J.M. Garg jmga...@gmail.com wrote:
Forwarding again for Id confirmation or otherwise pl.
Earlier relevant feedback:
“How about *Toona ciliata*?
--
Dr. Gurcharan Singh”
“*Certainly Meliaceae* with typical oblique leaf base
The second plant uploaded by Muthu Karthick is Viburnum punctatum.
navendu
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Its Commiphora for sure
navendu
On Mar 11, 10:50 pm, R. Vijayasankar vijay.botan...@gmail.com
wrote:
Is it not our Pachchai kiluvai (tamil name)? i.e. *Commiphora caudata*
On Thu, Mar 11, 2010 at 7:56 AM, Satish Phadke phadke.sat...@gmail.comwrote:
I am eager to know this.
I had posted
the plant you have posted is not Embelia but Ardisia solanacea
navendu
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Looks to me like its some species of Vitex, could be trifolia
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Its some species of Dendrobium
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Englehardia sp. (Juglandaceae)
navendu
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Vitex trifolia
navendu
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It is leaf of Sauromatum venosum
navendu
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This is Loxoma maculosa or Smithsonia maculosa and not L. straminea
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I too think its Hemidesmus
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Its a species of Chirita (or perhaps Didymocarpus)
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Looks like Fluggea (Securinega), although its not a climber
navendu
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The plant looks really robust, I would go with Aerides crispum
navendu
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I think this is one of the three varieties of Habenaria foliosa, but I
may be wrong
navendu
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I think this is Meyenia (may be earlier i was called thunbergia)
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Its Cassia spectabilis, differs from C.siamea in having acuminate
leaves
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Could be Iindigofera astragalina
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I think its Lindernia antipoda
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It should be some species of Androsace (Primulaceae)
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I think the two pictures belong to two different plants. The flowering
branch and flowers remind me of Burseraceae, perhaps Garuga pinnata
cos the flowers are identical.
The picture of the leaves is some scandent shrub belonging to either
Anonaceae or Rhamnaceae
navendu
Yes it is most probably Capparis sepiaria
navendu
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Its Sterculia for sure, however we need to check the species since NE
India has several species of this genus. Flowers would have been
helpful
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yes it looks very much like Trewia nudiflora, which i presume is a
synonym of M.nudiflorus
regards
navendu
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Cassytha filiformis
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Its a species of Mollugo
navendu
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Its Hemigraphis hirta (Acanthaceaea). I can mail the pictures if ones
interested in confirming.
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more likely to be Aerides maculosum
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its more likely to be capparis pedunculosa, sepiaria is a arid area
plant common in aravalis hill ranges. so unlikely you will find it in
mumbai
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Dutchesnia indica or Fragaria indica if it bears white flowers and
miniature strawberry like fruits
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it looks more like Veronica anagalis var aquatica
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its definitely veronica anagalis, scoparis has radially symmetrical
flowers not zygomorphic as seen in image Scoparia_dulcis_-_df_-_
(200309b).jpg
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looks very much like Casearia graveolens, infact this species is very
common in areas where the picture is taken.
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Looks to me like Mitricarpus hirtus, I am not sure if its a synonym of
Spermacoce pussila.
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I think its Bignonia megapotamica
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the hanging inflorescence and the tree in the picture are two diff
species. The flowers that i see in the picture belong to a species of
Thunbergia. I am not sure what the tree is, may be some species of
Ficus
navendu
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You received
Anthogonium gracile, its a species of ground orchid
navendu
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Its Acrocarpus for sure
navendu
On Apr 13, 9:59 pm, Dinesh Valke dinesh.va...@gmail.com wrote:
Parjanya ji ... just felt was too blunt in saying NOT for your query of *E.
stricta* var. *suberosa*
Reason: the branches are full of thorns, and the spectacular blooms appear
like hemispheres
I think its a species of Diospyros, likely to be D.montana
navendu
On May 15, 8:13 am, Gurcharan Singh singh...@gmail.com wrote:
Yes Vijayasankar ji
You are right. The plant has alternate leaves. The search is on, the plant
may not be Tamala after all.
--
Dr. Gurcharan Singh
Retired
Not Thunia alba, probably some species of Coelogyne, Pankaj should be
able to tell us more.
navendu
On May 14, 9:31 am, tanay bose tanaybos...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear neil ji,
Thank you Thunia alba seems fine for me thank you for the ID
Regards
Tanay
On Fri, May 14, 2010 at 8:49 AM, Neil
=8sig2=CdSTie0NO27Hdjufuj5E1wum=1itbs=1tbnid=RIp1Z4fApzgQFM:tbnh=99tbnw=135prev=/images%3Fq%3DCoelogyne%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dfirefox-a%26sa%3DN%26rls%3Dorg.mozilla:en-US:official%26tbs%3Disch:1ei=ljPuS-G6F5GxrAe2mImUBw
navendu
On May 15, 10:36 am, Navendu navendu.p...@gmail.com wrote
Looks like Wrightia arborea or Wrightia tomentosa (Apocynaceaea)
navendu
On May 18, 12:41 pm, Muthu Karthick nmk@gmail.com wrote:
Dear all,
Kindly id this Asclepiadaceae tree.
*Date/Time-*
02-05-2010 / 04:00 PM
*Location- Place, Altitude, GPS-*
Mudumalai WLS; 900 msl; TN
*Habitat
I think this should be Pentasachme (Asclepediaceae)
navendu
On May 18, 9:21 am, tanay bose tanaybos...@gmail.com wrote:
Some primitive group of plant , i hope from the flower morphology but have
never seen it.
tanay
On Tue, May 18, 2010 at 4:57 AM, Ritesh Kumar Choudhary
ritesh
monocots have perianth but they dont have
pentamerous flowers and opposite leaves.
navendu
On May 19, 4:34 pm, tanay bose tanaybos...@gmail.com wrote:
Dear Navendu Ji,
*Pentasachme sp* has long linear leaves with acute apex but this plant has
small roundish leaf with obtuse apex. The most fascinating
thats very interesting, we need to check if there is a third species
of Pentasachme from other sources such as Flora of China and Bhutan.
And please send better pictures if any
navendu
On May 20, 5:12 pm, Pravir Deshmukh prav...@gmail.com wrote:
Gurcharan Sir
Please find the photo of P
Doesn't match the two species of Pentasachme reported from India,
although similar to P. wallichiana
One other possibility is that it could be a species of Cynanchium.
Many of the himalayan species have long corolla lobes. Was it a twiner
or an erect herb?
navendu
On May 21, 1:52 pm, Gurcharan
Sophora glauca
navendu
On May 24, 5:00 pm, tanay bose tanaybos...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Muthu,
I wont be surprised if this plant is *Glycyrrhiza glabra L. *commonly known
as *Liquorice* (Jasthi madhu) has a great medicinal importance. Please
confirm my Id.
Regards
Tanay
On Mon, May 24
Its more likely to be a species of Mitrephora, my guess is Mitrephora
heyneana
Navendu
On Saturday, November 16, 2013 11:51:37 AM UTC+5:30, Muthu Karthick, N
wrote:
Dear all,
Please help me in identifying the tree of height 8 metres. Is this an
*Aglaia* sp. of Meliaceae?
Leaf: 8 cm
I completely agree with Radha..it is Cassine paniculata
Regards
Navendu
On Tuesday, December 2, 2014 9:57:33 AM UTC+5:30, radha veach wrote:
Would you consider Cassine paniculata?
I don't feel confident with this being any Spondias sp.
regards
Radha
--
You received this message
Sorry for digging out this old post again but I was wondering if this H.
ovalifolia and not H. furcifera. Pankaj what do you think? Isn't the closed
lip a characteristic of ovalifolia. Furcifera should have a open lip, right?
On Friday, September 14, 2012 at 6:27:45 PM UTC+5:30, Dinesh Valke
This look more like Ostodes paniculata. Please confirm
On Friday, April 15, 2016 at 10:01:56 PM UTC+5:30, tchakrab wrote:
>
> The only species of Claoxylon in your area is C. khasianum Hook.f.
> However, without close-up of flowers (with characters of stamens) or
> fruits, it is not possible
This is Artabotrys zeylanca
Navendu
On Thursday, February 18, 2016 at 11:41:02 PM UTC+5:30 tchakrab wrote:
> The ripe carpels are biseriate and up to 3 cm long in U. concava (= U.
> hookeri, U. lurida) whereas 1-seriate and up to 5 cm long in U. narum.
> Thus, the former seems
Please change this is Uvaria concava. I had previously wrongly identified
it as Uvaria narum
On Friday, March 7, 2014 at 9:16:20 PM UTC+5:30 Prashant wrote:
> Excellent photographs. Thanks Navendu for all yr upload.
> Regards
> Prashant
>
>
> On Fri, Mar 7, 2014 at 8:55 PM, S
This is Uvaria concava and NOT Uvaria narum
On Wednesday, May 8, 2019 at 9:10:13 AM UTC+5:30 JM Garg wrote:
> Wonderful images, Bharathi ji
>
> --
> With regards,
> J. M. Garg
>
> On Mon 6 May, 2019, 10:00 PM bharathi raja, wrote:
>
>> All, Found in Jawadhu hills of Eastern ghats in the month
/ (with a species database
of more than 5000 species)
--
Navendu Page
PhD student
Kartik Shanker's Lab
Center for Ecological Sciences
Indian Institute of Science
Bangalore - 560012
Ph: +91 9611053510
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