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Barringtonia, Freshwater Mangrove, Indian Oak, Indian Putat

Barringtonia Acutangula

Description:

Tree with long showering structures at good height. The flowers are with red in color and I have circled in yellow at the second picture.

Habitat:

Along the stream of water.

Notes:

http://www.flowersofindia.net/catalog/sl... Common name: Barringtonia, Freshwater Mangrove, Indian Oak, Indian Putat • Assamese: Hendol, Hinyol, Pani amra • Bengali: Hijal • Hindi: Hijagal, Hijjal, समुन्द्र फल, Samundarphal • Kannada: Mavinkubia, Niruganigily, Dhatripala • Malayalam: Attampu, Attupelu, Nir perzha • Marathi: Tiwar, Newar, Sathaphala, Samudraphala • Oriya: Nijhira • Sanskrit: Abdhiphala, Ambudhiphala, अम्बुज Ambuja • Tamil: Aram, Kadambu, Kadappai, ஸமுத்திரப்பழம samudra pazham • Telugu: Kurpa • Urdu: Samandarphal Barringtonia is an evergreen tree of moderate size, called by Sanskrit writers Hijja or Hijjala. The fruit is spoken of as Samudra-phala and Dhātriphala or ”nurse’s fruit,” and is one of the best known domestic remedies. Also called Stream Barringtonia or Itchy Tree (after a catepillar with irritant hairs that sometimes colonises the undersides of the leaves) Barringtonia is a tree 5-8 m tall with rough fissured dark grey bark. Leaves are obovate. Red flowers are produced on pendulous racemes about 20cm long. Four sided fruits are produced periodically throughout the year. Partly deciduous in extended dry periods. This species grows on the banks of freshwater rivers, the edges of freshwater swamps and lagoons and on seasonally flooded lowland plains, commonly on heavy soils. Found in Madagascar and tropical Asia, amongst other places. Propagation is by seed. Tolerant of heavy clay soils with poor drainage, it can grow in a range of soils. Medicinal uses: Warning: Unverified information This tree has long been used for medicine, timber and as a fish poison. In traditional medicine, when children suffer from a cold in the chest, the seed is rubbed down on a stone with water and applied over the sternum, and if there is much dyspnoea a few grains with or without the juice of fresh ginger are administered internally and seldom fail to induce vomiting and the expulsion of mucus from the air passages. More recently it has become the focus of research for pain-killing compounds.

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1 Comment

Leuba Ridgway
Leuba Ridgway 6 years ago

Interesting !

vm.bharathiraja
Spotted by
vm.bharathiraja

Tamil Nadu, India

Spotted on Jul 11, 2017
Submitted on Jul 11, 2017

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