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Getonia floribunda

Roxb.

Ukshi

Combretaceae Edible: Fruit - medicine, Vine - water 443 iNaturalist observations

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(c) Seema Merchant, some rights reserved (CC BY), uploaded by Seema Merchant

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(c) Dharmendra Padhiyar, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Dharmendra Padhiyar

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(c) Aditya Satish, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Aditya Satish

Description

A large climbing shrub. It can be 5-10 m long. The vines are 5-10 cm across. The bark is grey. The branches have thick fluffy layers in the surface. The leaves are oval and 5-12 cm long. New branches are hairy and rust coloured. The flowers are in dense clusters at the ends of branches. The fruit are fluffy and 8 mm long. They have 5 edges.

Edible Uses

The ripe fruit are eaten. The vine can provide water.

Traditional Uses

The ripe fruit are eaten.

This uses section is brief — help expand it

Medicinal Uses

Ukshi is revered as a life-saver by the forest dwellers who regularly depend on this vine during summer when streams dry up. Sections of the vine store water, which people often use to quench their thirst. The leaves are bitter, astringent, laxative, anthelmintic, depurative, diaphoretic and febrifuge. They are useful in intestinal worms, colic, leprosy, malarial fever, dysentery, ulcers and vomiting. The fruits are useful in jaundice, ulcers, pruritus and skin diseases.

Distribution

It is a tropical plant. It occurs in the Western Ghats in India.

Where It Grows

Asia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, India, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, SE Asia, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam,

Synonyms

Calycopteris floribunda (Roxb.) Lam. ex PoirCalycopteris nutans (Roxb.) KurzGetonia nitida Roth. Getonia nutans Roxb,Poivrea sericea Walp.and others

Also Known As

Adivijama, Bontha pandlu, Kokkarai, Minnarajoti

References (2)

  • Kuhnlein, H. V., et al, 2009, Indigenous Peoples' food systems. FAO Rome p 195 (As Calycopteris floribunda)
  • World Checklist of Useful Plant Species 2020. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

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