Page:Indian Medicinal Plants (Text Part 1).djvu/571

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
N. 0. LEGUMINOSÆ.
491


437. Neptunia oleracea, Lour., h.f.b.l, ii. 285, Roxb. 420.

Vern : — Pâni-najak ; pani-lâjak (B.); Laj-alu (Patna) ; Panilajak (Bomb.) ; Sunday-kiray (Tam.) ; Niru-tal-vapu, nidrayung (Tel.) ; Nitti-todda-vaddi (Malay.).

Habitat : — In tanks, throughout the greater part of India.

An annual herb, without prickles, stout, wide-creeping, rarely throwing out suberect branches ; producing copious fibrous rootlets from the same nodes that bear the leaves and penduncles. Stems almost entirely prostrate. Leaves bipinnate, with persistent stipules and numerous small strap-shaped, sensitve, membranous leaflets. Pinnae 4-6, 2-3in. long. Rachis glandless ; leaflets glabrous, obtuse, 16-30, ⅓-½in. long. Peduncles ascending, ¼-1ft. ; bracts small ovate, sub-obtuse. Sterile flowers numerous. Staminodes ¼-⅓in,, strap-shaped, yellow. Corolla 1/24in. Pod oblique, oblong, ½-1in. long, rostrate, dry, soon dehiscing by the upper suture, 6-10-seeded.

Use : — Used as refrigerant and astringent (Irvine.)


438. Entada scandens, Bth., h.f.b.l, ii. 287.

Syn. : — Mimosa scandens, Linn., Roxb. 420.

Vern. :— Gila-gach (B.); Gârbi, kârdal, khairi (B.); Gârambi, gardul (Bomb.) ; Geredi (Uriya) ; Pangra (Nepal) ; Taktokhejem (Lepcha) ; Parinkaka-vully (Mal.).

The seeds ; Pitpâpra (Bomb.).

Habitat:— Central and Eastern Himalayas, Nepal, Sikkim, and Western Peninsula.

A very large, woody climber, stems angled and much twisted spirally. Dark-brown, rough. Wood dark brown when dry, in alternate layers of woody and bark tissue. Brandis describes the wood structure more accurately thus :— " The wood to a great extent consists of thin walled parenchyma, in which are embedded longitudinal strands of vessels, sieve-tubes, and wood fibres." Leaves tripinnate, common petioles ending in long, woody, bifid tendrils ; pinnæ stalked opposite, two