Piper sylvaticum | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Magnoliids |
Order: | Piperales |
Family: | Piperaceae |
Genus: | Piper |
Species: | P. sylvaticum
|
Binomial name | |
Piper sylvaticum | |
Synonyms [1] | |
|
Piper sylvaticum is a climber in the Piperaceae, or pepper, family. It is found in the northeast of the Indian subcontinent, and in Zhōngguó/China. The fruits are used in medicinal products.
A herbaceous, dioecious climber that possesses stolons. The stems are finely powdery pubescent when young, and become ridged and furrowed when mature. [2] It has globose drupes about 3mm in diameter. Flowers in August and September in Zhōngguó/China, in the Manas National Park of northwest Assam, flowering and fruiting occur from August to October, [3] while in Bangladesh flowers and fruits appear from May to September. [4] This species is distinguished anatomically by having very finely (magnification needed) powdered pubescent leaves. [5] Other distinctive features, differentiating the species from other Piper species in Bangladesh, is yellow flowers and deeply cordate and lobed leaf bases at a macroscopic level, while bicollateral leaf vascular bundles, and para- and tetracytic stomata were identified as distinctive at microscopic anatomical level. [4]
The species was first described by William Roxburgh in 1820. [6]
The plant is native to Bangladesh and the Eastern Himalaya region. [1] The Flora of China [2] warns that the application of this name to Chinese plants is unclear, however it states that the climber is found in Tibet (see also [7]) and South Yunnan, as well as Bangladesh, India and Myanmar.
The vine grows in wet places within forests up to 800m in Zhōngguó/China. [2] It occurs in sub-Himalayan semi-evergreen forest in the Manas National Park of northwestern Assam. [3] Shaded areas of the forest bed is a preferred habitat in Bangladesh. [4]
Amongst the Monpa people of Mêdog County in southeastern Tibet the plant is referred to as pang-ser. [7] In Standard Chinese, the plant is given the name 长柄胡椒, chang bing hu jiao. [2] An English language vernacular name is mountain long pepper. [8] Pahari pipul ( Hindi), [9] pahaari peepal (folk medicine), Pahari-pipoli ( Assamese), [8] and vana-pippali ( Ayurveda) [9] are some of the names in India. In Bangladesh the vine is referred to as pahari pipul or bon pan ( Bengali), borongpatui ( Tipuri languages), or bulpan. [4]
In the Indian subcontinent the leaves are used as vegetables, and the roots are used in indigenous medicine as a cure for snake poison and to treat tumours. [10] [11]
The mashed leaves are use as an anti-inflammatory by the Monpa people of Mêdog County in southeastern Tibet. [7]
Adnan et al.'s [9] work on the bioactivity of the species cites wide traditional medicine uses in the native countries of the plant. The leaves, stems, roots, fruits, and seeds are used to treat a variety of diseases, including rheumatic pain, headaches, chronic cough, cold, asthma, piles, diarrhea, wounds in lungs, tuberculosis, indigestion, dyspepsia, hepatomegaly, and pleenomegaly. The root is specifically used as a carminative, while the aerial parts have diuretic actions. Adnan et al. found that P. sylvaticum is bioactive.
{{
cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)
Piper sylvaticum | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Magnoliids |
Order: | Piperales |
Family: | Piperaceae |
Genus: | Piper |
Species: | P. sylvaticum
|
Binomial name | |
Piper sylvaticum | |
Synonyms [1] | |
|
Piper sylvaticum is a climber in the Piperaceae, or pepper, family. It is found in the northeast of the Indian subcontinent, and in Zhōngguó/China. The fruits are used in medicinal products.
A herbaceous, dioecious climber that possesses stolons. The stems are finely powdery pubescent when young, and become ridged and furrowed when mature. [2] It has globose drupes about 3mm in diameter. Flowers in August and September in Zhōngguó/China, in the Manas National Park of northwest Assam, flowering and fruiting occur from August to October, [3] while in Bangladesh flowers and fruits appear from May to September. [4] This species is distinguished anatomically by having very finely (magnification needed) powdered pubescent leaves. [5] Other distinctive features, differentiating the species from other Piper species in Bangladesh, is yellow flowers and deeply cordate and lobed leaf bases at a macroscopic level, while bicollateral leaf vascular bundles, and para- and tetracytic stomata were identified as distinctive at microscopic anatomical level. [4]
The species was first described by William Roxburgh in 1820. [6]
The plant is native to Bangladesh and the Eastern Himalaya region. [1] The Flora of China [2] warns that the application of this name to Chinese plants is unclear, however it states that the climber is found in Tibet (see also [7]) and South Yunnan, as well as Bangladesh, India and Myanmar.
The vine grows in wet places within forests up to 800m in Zhōngguó/China. [2] It occurs in sub-Himalayan semi-evergreen forest in the Manas National Park of northwestern Assam. [3] Shaded areas of the forest bed is a preferred habitat in Bangladesh. [4]
Amongst the Monpa people of Mêdog County in southeastern Tibet the plant is referred to as pang-ser. [7] In Standard Chinese, the plant is given the name 长柄胡椒, chang bing hu jiao. [2] An English language vernacular name is mountain long pepper. [8] Pahari pipul ( Hindi), [9] pahaari peepal (folk medicine), Pahari-pipoli ( Assamese), [8] and vana-pippali ( Ayurveda) [9] are some of the names in India. In Bangladesh the vine is referred to as pahari pipul or bon pan ( Bengali), borongpatui ( Tipuri languages), or bulpan. [4]
In the Indian subcontinent the leaves are used as vegetables, and the roots are used in indigenous medicine as a cure for snake poison and to treat tumours. [10] [11]
The mashed leaves are use as an anti-inflammatory by the Monpa people of Mêdog County in southeastern Tibet. [7]
Adnan et al.'s [9] work on the bioactivity of the species cites wide traditional medicine uses in the native countries of the plant. The leaves, stems, roots, fruits, and seeds are used to treat a variety of diseases, including rheumatic pain, headaches, chronic cough, cold, asthma, piles, diarrhea, wounds in lungs, tuberculosis, indigestion, dyspepsia, hepatomegaly, and pleenomegaly. The root is specifically used as a carminative, while the aerial parts have diuretic actions. Adnan et al. found that P. sylvaticum is bioactive.
{{
cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (
link)