Disclaimer : This databank is curated from literature and may not claim for any medications or directly use of plants without any prior knowledge or consultation of physician.



Botanical Name Plant's Common Name Plant Family

MT028 : Spondias pinnata (L. f.) Kurz

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Melghat's Flora's Serial No. : 97  
Class : Magnoliopsida - Dicotyledons
Order : Sapindales
Family : Anacardiaceae - Sumac family
Genus : Spondias L. - mombin
Species : Spondias pinnata (L. f.) Kurz
Plant Location in Melghat : Koktu valley, Andheri Khora, Betha pati  
Plant Category : Tree  
Plant's Current Status : -  
Plant Family : Anacardiaceae  

 
Plant Common Name : Amra, Katamba, K-kekda Ka Tamba, Wild Mango, Andaman mombin, Indian hog plum, Indian mombin • Hindi: ambara, ambari, amra, bhringi-phal, metula, pashu-haritaki, pitan • Manipuri: Heining • Marathi: amada, ambada, dholamba, khatamba, ranamba • Malayalam: ampazham • Telugu: adavimamidi, adhvamu, ambalamu • Bengali: aamada, aamraata, aamraataka • Oriya: Ambaada • Konkani: ambade, ambado • Assamese: aamrata • Gujarati: ambaada • Khasi: Dieng-sohpier • Mizo: Tawitaw • Sanskrit: aamraata, amraatakah, metula, pitan • Tamil: kincam, pulima • Nepali: amaro • Tangkhul: Khursongthei
 
Synonym : Evia amara Comm. ex Bl.
Spondias acuminata Roxb.
Spondias amara Lam.
Spondias bivenomarginalis K.M. Feng & P.Y. Mao.
Spondias macrophylla Wall.
Spondias mangifera Willd.
Spondias paniculata Roxb. ex Wight & Arn.
Wirtgenia decandra Jungh.


Description : Deciduous trees, to 25 m high, bark 15-25 mm thick, surface grey to pale brown, smooth, vertically striated; outer bark 1 mm thick, dead, corky; inner bark semi fibrous, pink, streaked with white; blaze pink; exudation colour less, gummy. Leaves imparipinnate, alternate, clustered at the end of branches, estipulate; rachis 25-45 cm, slender, glabrous, swollen at base; leaflets 5-21, opposite or subopposite; petiolule 2-8 mm long, slender, glabrous; lamina 4-23 x 2.5-10 cm, oblong, elliptic or elliptic-oblong, base obtuse, subacute, oblique or round, apex acuminate or obtusely acuminate, margin entire, glabrous, chartaceous or membranous; lateral nerves many, parallel, close, slender, prominent, connected by an intramarginal nerve, intercostae reticulate. Flowers polygamous, yellowish-white, subsessile, in terminal spreading panicles; calyx small; lobes 5, imbricate, deciduous; petals 5, oblong, glabrous, spreading, valvate; disc thick, annular, 10-crenate; stamens 10, inserted below the disc; filaments slender; anthers versatile; ovary ovoid or subglobose, superior, immersed in the disc, 5-celled, 1 ovule in each cell, pendulous; styles 5, connivent; stigma spreading. Fruit a fleshy drupe, 3.8-5 cm long, yellow, endocarp woody surround by longitudinal interwoven fibres; seeds 1-3, of which only one is perfect, pendulous, oblong.
 
Curated Medicinal Use / Activity : The fruit is used as an astringent and antiscorbutic. It is used in the treatment of bilious dyspepsia. The juice of the fruit is applied against earache. The bark is recommended in the treatment of stomach aches and dysentery. A paste of the bark is applied topically in the treatment of rheumatism and swollen joints. The root is considered to be useful in regulating menstruation. This plant has been known to possess anti-microbial, anti-diabetic, ulcer-protective, anti-cancerous, anti-Diarrheal, anthelmintic, cytotoxic and Hepatoprotective activity.
 
Plant's Phytochemicals : beta-amyrin
oleanolic acid
daucosterol
cycloartanone 24-methylene
lignoceric acid
ellagitannins
galloylgeranin
lignoseric acid
beta–carotein
lignoceric acid
beta-sitosterol

Reference : ~ Santosh Kumar Singh, Jay Ram Patel, Prashant Kumar Dubey and Sonia Thakur; "A review on anti-asthmatic activity of traditional medicinal plants"; IJPSR (2014); 5(10): 4109-4116 PMID :

~ Dhore MA and Joshi PA; "Flora of Melghat Tiger Reserve"; Directorate, Project Tiger, Melghat (1988); PMID :

~ Omesh Bajpai, Jitendra Pandey and Lal Babu Chaudhary; "Ethnomedicinal Uses of Tree Species by Tharu Tribes in the Himalayan Terai Region of India"; Research Journal of Medicinal Plant (2016); 10(1): 19-41 PMID :