Piante medicinali ayurvediche
La tradizione ayurvedica dello Sri Lanka vanta una ricca varietà di piante medicinali utilizzate da secoli. Lo Sri Lanka vanta una ricca tradizione di medicina ayurvedica, che attinge alle sue conoscenze indigene e a una varietà di piante medicinali. Ecco alcune delle principali piante medicinali ayurvediche presenti in Sri Lanka
Santalum album; Sandal Wood; Sudu Handun; සුදු හඳුන්
Santalum album, or Indian sandalwood, is a small tropical tree, and the traditional source of sandalwood oil. It is native to southern India and Southeast Asia. It is considered sacred in some religions like Hinduism, and some cultures place great significance on its fragrant qualities. However, the high value of the species has caused over-exploitation, to the point where the wild population is vulnerable to extinction. Indian sandalwood still commands high prices for its essential oil owing to its high alpha santalol content, but due to lack of sizable trees it is no longer used for fine woodworking as before. The plant is long-lived, but harvest is only viable after many years.
DescriptionThe height of the evergreen tree is between 4 and 9 metres. They may live to one hundred years of age. The tree is variable in habit, usually upright to sprawling, and may intertwine with other species. The plant parasitises the roots of other tree species, with a haustorium adaptation on its own roots, but without major detriment to its hosts. An individual will form a non-obligate relationship with a number of other plants. Up to 300 species (including its own) can host the tree's development - supplying macronutrients phosphorus, nitrogen and potassium, and shade - especially during early phases of development. It may propagate itself through wood suckering during its early development, establishing small stands. The reddish or brown bark can be almost black and is smooth in young trees, becoming cracked with a red reveal. The heartwood is pale green to white as the common name indicates. The leaves are thin, opposite and ovate to lanceolate in shape. Glabrous surface is shiny and bright green, with a glaucous pale reverse. Fruit is produced after three years, viable seeds after five. These seeds are distributed by birds.
NomenclatureThe nomenclature for other "sandalwoods" and the taxonomy of the genus are derived from this species' historical and widespread use. Etymologically it is derived from Sanskrit chandanam, meaning "wood for burning incense", and related to candrah, meaning "shining, glowing".
Santalum album is included in the family Santalaceae, and is commonly known as white or East Indian sandalwood. The name, Santalum ovatum, used by Robert Brown in Prodromus Florae Novae Hollandiae (1810) was described as a synonym of this species by Alex George in 1984. The epithet album refers to the "white" of the heartwood.
The species was the first to be known as sandalwood. Other species in the genus Santalum, such as the Australian S. spicatum, are also referred to as true sandalwoods, to distinguish them from trees with similar-smelling wood or oil.
DistributionSantalum album is indigenous to the tropical belt of the peninsular India, eastern Indonesia and northern Australia. The main distribution is in the drier tropical regions of India and the Indonesian islands of Timor and Sumba. There is still debate as to whether is native to Australia and India or was introduced by fishermen, traders or birds from southeast Asi
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alloro a fiori artigliosi
Acronychia pedunculata -
Bael
Aegle marmelos -
Albero di Leichhardt
Nauclea orientalis -
Falsa calamba
Coscinium fenestratum -
Malabar Gulbel
Tinospora malabarica -
Titberry
Allophylus cobbe -
Albero di ferro
Memecylon capitellatum -
Foglia di zucchina
Cissampelos pareira -
Arancia amara
Citrus aurantium -
Pianta dell'albero di Reinwardt
Biophytun reinward -
Tè Fukien
Carmona microphylla -
tamarindo del Malabar
Garcinia cambogia -
Albero delle foglie di curry
Murraya koenigii -
Kappetiya
Croton laccifer -
lillà indiano
Azadirachta indica -
Sida spinosa
Sida alba -
Scalatore arancione
Toddlia asiatica -
cannella di Ceylon
Cinnamomum zeylanicum -
Jackfruit
Artocarpus eterofillo -
Karonda
Carissa carandas -
ciliegia spagnola
Mimusops elengi -
uva spina indiana
Phyltanthus emblica -
palma da betel
Areca catechu -
Geranio della giungla
Ixora coccinea -
Allanguum dalle foglie di salvia
Alangium salviifolium -
Champak
Michelia champaca -
Tamarind
Tamarindus indica -
Falso pepe nero
Embellia ribes -
Limeberry
Micromelum ceylanicum -
Scalata dell'Atalantia
Paramignya monophylla
Ayurvedico ed erboristico
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