Refine your search
Collections
Co-Authors
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z All
Arisdason, W.
- Fimbristylis aggregata C.E.C. Fisch. (Cyperaceae), Rediscovered from the Anamalais, Western Ghats, Tamil Nadu
Abstract Views :172 |
PDF Views:118
Authors
W. Arisdason
1,
P. Daniel
1
Affiliations
1 Botanical Survey of India, Southern Circle, Coimbatore 641 003, IN
1 Botanical Survey of India, Southern Circle, Coimbatore 641 003, IN
Source
Nelumbo - The Bulletin of the Botanical Survey of India, Vol 47, No 1-4 (2005), Pagination: 163-166Abstract
No Abstract.- Rediscovery of Arisaema sarracenioides E. Barnes & C.E.C. Fisch. (Araceae) from the Anamalais, Western Ghats, Tamil Nadu
Abstract Views :142 |
PDF Views:103
Authors
W. Arisdason
1,
P. Daniel
1
Affiliations
1 Botanical Survey of India, Souther Circle, Coimbatore 641 003, IN
1 Botanical Survey of India, Souther Circle, Coimbatore 641 003, IN
Source
Nelumbo - The Bulletin of the Botanical Survey of India, Vol 47, No 1-4 (2005), Pagination: 173-176Abstract
No Abstract.- Palms of Karnataka
Abstract Views :145 |
PDF Views:118
Authors
Affiliations
1 Central National Herbarium, Botanical Survey of India, P.O. Botanic Garden, Howrah 711 103, IN
2 Botanical Survey of India, CGO Complex, Salt Lake City, Kolkata 700 064, IN
1 Central National Herbarium, Botanical Survey of India, P.O. Botanic Garden, Howrah 711 103, IN
2 Botanical Survey of India, CGO Complex, Salt Lake City, Kolkata 700 064, IN
Source
Nelumbo - The Bulletin of the Botanical Survey of India, Vol 54 (2012), Pagination: 278-278Abstract
No Abstract.- Aquarius cordifolius (L.) Christenh. & Byng (Alismataceae), an Invasive Alien Species:Its Introduction, Colonization and Plausible Threats in India
Abstract Views :298 |
PDF Views:91
Authors
Anant Kumar
1,
W. Arisdason
2
Affiliations
1 Central National Herbarium, Howrah 711 103, IN
2 Botanical Survey of India, Southern Regional Centre, Coimbatore 641 003, IN
1 Central National Herbarium, Howrah 711 103, IN
2 Botanical Survey of India, Southern Regional Centre, Coimbatore 641 003, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 118, No 4 (2020), Pagination: 524-525Abstract
The exotic or non-native organisms that occur outside their natural adapted ranges and dispersal potential are called alien species. Human beings have been introducing animals and plants from one part of the world to another, for various purposes by different means since time immemorial. Some of the alien species become invasive when they are introduced deliberately or accidentally outside their natural habitats into new areas where they express the potential to establish, invade and out-compete native species1.References
- Raghubanshi, A. S., Rai, L. C., Gaur, J. P. and Singh, J. S., Curr. Sci., 2005, 88(4), 539–540.
- http://www.plantsoftheworldonline.org/taxon/urn (accessed on 2 December 2019).
- Guha, R. and Mondal, M. S., Wetland Phytodiversity: A Complete Guide to Indian Helobieae, Scientific Publishers, Jodhpur, 2005, p. 273.
- Brunel, S., Bull. OEPP/EPPO Bull., 2009, 39, 201–213.
- https://www.cabi.org/isc/datasheet/113999 (accessed on 13 July 2019).
- http://griis.org/search3.php (accessed on 13 July 2019).
- https://sites.google.com/site/efloraofindia/ (accessed on 12 July 2019).
- Rataj, K. and Horeman, T. J., Aquarium Plants – Their Identification, Cultivation and Ecology, T.F.H. Publications, Inc., NJ, USA, 1977, p. 448.
- Copp, G. H., Vilizzi, L. and Gozlan, R. E., Aquat. Conserv., 2010, 20, 595–601.
- Genovesi, P., Biodiversity, 2009, 10(2), 3–4.
- Cronk, Q. C. B. and Fuller, J. L., Plant Invaders. The Threat to Natural Ecosystems, Earthscan Publications Ltd, USA, 2001.
- Pieterse, A. H. and Murphy, K. J., Aquatic Weeds: The Ecology and Management of Nuisance Aquatic Vegetation, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 1993, pp. 85–92.
- Perrings, C., Bull. Mar. Sci., 2002, 70, 541–552.
- The Wire; http://eprints.atree.org/ (accessed on 10 July 2019).
- Dr. P. Lakshminarasimhan (28.08.1959–15.07.2020)
Abstract Views :190 |
PDF Views:94
Authors
Affiliations
1 Botanical Survey of India, Southern Regional Centre, TNAU Campus, Lawley Road, Coimbatore – 641003, IN
1 Botanical Survey of India, Southern Regional Centre, TNAU Campus, Lawley Road, Coimbatore – 641003, IN
Source
Nelumbo - The Bulletin of the Botanical Survey of India, Vol 62, No 1 (2020), Pagination: 103-106Abstract
No Abstract.Keywords
No Keywords.- Recollection of Indian lipstick plant, Aeschynanthus monetaria Dunn (Gesneriaceae) after a century from Arunachal Pradesh, India
Abstract Views :196 |
PDF Views:92
Authors
Affiliations
1 Botanical Survey of India, Arunachal Pradesh Regional Centre, Itanagar 791 111, IN
2 Botanical Survey of India, CGO Complex, 3rd MSO Building, DF Block, Sector 1, Salt Lake City, Kolkata 700 064, IN
3 Botanical Survey of India, Southern Regional Centre, TNAU Campus, Lawley Road, Coimbatore 641 003, IN
1 Botanical Survey of India, Arunachal Pradesh Regional Centre, Itanagar 791 111, IN
2 Botanical Survey of India, CGO Complex, 3rd MSO Building, DF Block, Sector 1, Salt Lake City, Kolkata 700 064, IN
3 Botanical Survey of India, Southern Regional Centre, TNAU Campus, Lawley Road, Coimbatore 641 003, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 122, No 8 (2022), Pagination: 884-885Abstract
No Abstract.Keywords
No keywordsReferences
- http://www.plantsoftheworldonline.org (accessed on 30 December 2021).
- Bhattacharyya, U. C. and Goel, A. K., Phytotaxonomy, 2014, 14, 1–22.
- Sinha, B. K. and Datta, S., Nelumbo, 2016, 58, 1–43.
- Jack, W., Trans. Linn. Soc. London, 1823, 14, 42.
- Clarke, C. B., In Monographiae Phanerogamarum (eds de Candolle, A. L. P. P. and de Candolle, A. C. P.), G. Masson, Paris, 1883, vol. 5(1), pp. 1–303.
- Clarke, C. B., In The Flora of British India (ed. Hooker, J. D.), L. Reeve & Co., London, UK, 1884, vol. 4, pp. 336–375.
- Gledhill, D., The Names of Plants, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2002, 3rd edn, pp. 1–326.
- Dunn, S. T., Bull. Misc. Inform. Kew, 1920, 1920(4), 135.
- Hu, J., Xiong, Y.-N., Li, L., Liu, Q. and Wen, F., Phytotaxa, 2020, 450, 109–114.
- Bachman, S., Moat, J., Hill, A., de la Torre, J. and Scott, B., ZooKeys, 2011, 150, 117–126.
- http://www.iucnredlist.org/documents/RedListGuidelines.pdf.2019 (accessed on 30 December 2021)
- Why is it Essential to Critically Study Allied Taxa while Describing those New to Science? A Case Study Based on Lepidagathis keralensis (Acanthaceae)
Abstract Views :57 |
PDF Views:33
Authors
Affiliations
1 Department of Botany, Madras Christian College (Autonomous), Tambaram East, Chennai 600 059, IN
2 Botanical Survey of India, Southern Regional Centre, TNAU Campus, Lawley Road, Coimbatore 641 003, IN
1 Department of Botany, Madras Christian College (Autonomous), Tambaram East, Chennai 600 059, IN
2 Botanical Survey of India, Southern Regional Centre, TNAU Campus, Lawley Road, Coimbatore 641 003, IN
Source
Current Science, Vol 125, No 3 (2023), Pagination: 247-252Abstract
The effective conservation of a species is feasible only when its taxonomy and ecology are well understood. India is one of the top ten countries in the world, reporting several new species and is also recognized as a centre of plant extinction. The role of plant taxonomists in the country is considered crucial. This article discusses one of the most neglected taxonomic practices among Indian taxonomists while describing new taxa. It is done in the context of the field and detailed macro- and micro-morphological studies of a newly described Lepidagathis Willd. (Acanthaceae) species from the lateritic plateaus of the Western Ghats in Kerala as an example. The taxonomy of Lepidagathis keralensis Madhus. & N.P. Singh is also discussed with an updated description and colour photographs for precise identification.Keywords
Allied and New Taxa, Diagnostic Characters, Lepidagathis keralensis, Plant Extinction, Taxonomic Practices.References
- Cheek, M. et al., New scientific discoveries: plants and fungi. Plants, People, Planet, 2020, 2, 371–388.
- Antonelli, A., Fry, C., Smith, R. J., Simmonds, M. S. J., Kersey, P. J. and Pritchard, H. W., State of the World’s Plants and Fungi, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, 2020, pp. 1–96.
- http://www.ipni.org (accessed on 28 October 2022).
- Mao, A. A., Dash, S. S. and Kumar, S., Plant Discoveries 2020, Botanical Survey of India, Kolkata, 2021, pp. 1–78.
- Mao, A. A., Agrawala, D. K., Dash, S. S., Shukla, A. N. and Mukherjee, S., Plant Discoveries 2021, Botanical Survey of India, Kolkata, 2022, pp. 1–151.
- Lughadha, N. E. et al., Extinction risk and threats to plants and fungi. Plants, People, Planet, 2020, 2, 389–408.
- Raven, P. and Wackernagel, M., Maintaining biodiversity will define our long-term success. Plant Divers., 2020, 42, 211–220.
- Venu, P. and Sanjappa, M., Taxonomic practices and Indian concerns. Curr. Sci., 2021, 120, 1152–1159.
- Wood, J. R. I., Towards a taxonomy of taxonomists. Oxf. Plant Syst., 2019, OPS 25, 9–10.
- https://doi.org/10.12705/Code.2018 (accessed on 28 October 2022).
- Raja, P., Tagore, J. K., Soosairaj, S. and Dhatchanamoorthy, N., Jasminum greenii sp. nov. (Oleaceae): a new species from Tamil Nadu, India. Indian J. For., 2022, 148(1), 107–108.
- Yugandhar, P., Sivaramakrishna, P., Savithramma, N. and Singh, L. J., Cyanotis deccanensis sp. nov. (Commelinaceae) from Eastern Ghats, Andhra Pradesh, India. Nordic J. Bot., 2021, e03324, 1–8.
- Madhusoodanan, P. V. and Singh, N. P., A new species of Lepidagathis (Acanthaceae) from South India. Kew Bull., 1992, 47, 301–303.
- Remadevi, S. and Kumar, M. S. B., Contributions to the Flora of Kerala: The Family Acanthaceae, Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh, Dehra Dun, 2009, pp. 110–115.
- Biju, P., Kumar, V. N. S. A., Arya, S., Josekutty, E. J. and Augustine, J., Lepidagathis ananthapuramensis (Acanthaceae): a new species from the lateritic plateaus of Kerala, India. Phytotaxa, 2020, 460(4), 269–276.
- Shaju, T., Rijuraj, M. P., Rajendraprasad, M., Rasiya Beegam, A., and Narayanan, M. K. R., Occurrence of Lepidagathis clavata Dalzell (Acanthaceae) an endemic species of the Western Ghats, in the lateritic plateau of Northern Kerala. Ann. Plant Sci., 2019, 8.9, 3616–3620.