Clematis gouriana: Difference between revisions
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==Distribution== |
==Distribution== |
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The creeper occurs in the Himalayas from India, eastward through Nepal and into western and southern [[China]].<ref name="ClematisEncyclopedia">{{cite book|title=An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Clematis|last1=Toomey|first1=Mary|last2=Leeds|first2=Everett|publisher=British Clematis Society|place=Portland, Oregon, USA|page=206}}</ref> |
The creeper occurs in the [[Himalayas]] from [[India]], eastward through [[Nepal]] and into western and southern [[China]].<ref name="ClematisEncyclopedia">{{cite book|title=An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Clematis|last1=Toomey|first1=Mary|last2=Leeds|first2=Everett|publisher=British Clematis Society|place=Portland, Oregon, USA|page=206}}</ref> The hilly districts of the[[Western Ghats]] of [[India]], and [[Sri lanka]].<ref name="TalbotBombay"/>, |
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The creeper is common in the Western Ghats, and the patches of adjoining forest of the Konkan coast and Deccan plateau.<ref name="MahaStateGaz"/> |
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==Description== |
==Description== |
Revision as of 05:28, 24 March 2018
Clematis gouriana | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Order: | Ranunculales |
Family: | Ranunculaceae |
Genus: | Clematis |
Species: | C. gouriana
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Binomial name | |
Clematis gouriana |
Clematis gouriana, or Indian Traveller's Joy[1], is a liana found in Asia which belongs to the buttercup family (Ranunculaceae).[2] It was described by Roxb. ex DC. and published in Regni Vegetabilis Systema Naturale 1: 138-139, in 1818.[3]
Distribution
The creeper occurs in the Himalayas from India, eastward through Nepal and into western and southern China.[4] The hilly districts of theWestern Ghats of India, and Sri lanka.[1], The creeper is common in the Western Ghats, and the patches of adjoining forest of the Konkan coast and Deccan plateau.[2]
Description
A large climbing shrub, reaching upto the canopies of trees. Glabrous, except for the younger parts of the plant. Grooved stem and branches. Leaves are pinnate, sometimes bi-pinnate or tri-pinnate. Leaflets may be ovate or oblong acumineate, with nerves and reticulate venation, and have a shining surface. Small flowers in many branched pannicles. Each flower is 1 to 1.5 inches wide, fragrant and greenish-white. Petals are absent but four greenish sepals present which are oblong-ovate and covered with soft down. Many stamens, with free, narrow and straight filaments which thicken towards the top. Compressed achenes, narrowly ovoid or oblong, with persistant feathery style.[2][1][5][6][7]
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Flowers
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Pinnate leaflets
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Ribbed stems
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Achenes
References
- ^ a b c W A Talbot (1902). The Trees, Shrubs and Wood-Climbers of the Bombay Presidency (2 ed.). Bombay: Government Central Press. p. 2.
- ^ a b c P. Setu Madhava Rao, ed. (January 1961). Maharashtra State Gazetteer, Botany, Part III - Miscellaneous Plants. General Series Volume A (2 ed.). Mumbai: Maharastra State. p. 522.
- ^ "Clematis gouriana Roxb. ex DC". The Plant List. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
- ^ Toomey, Mary; Leeds, Everett. An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Clematis. Portland, Oregon, USA: British Clematis Society. p. 206.
- ^ Talbot, WA; Gibson, Alexander (1861). The Bombay Flora (2 ed.). Bombay: Education Society Press. p. 1.
- ^ Sardesai, Milind; Govekar, Ravikiran; Yadav, SR (2013). Field Guide to the Plants of Sahyadri and Konkan. Pune: Forest Department, Government of Maharashtra. p. 138.
- ^ Shrikant Ingalhallikar (November 2001). Flowers of Sahyadri. Pune: S. Ingalhallikar. p. 98.
External links
- Media related to Clematis gouriana at Wikimedia Commons