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Aporosa villosa

Aporosa villosa is a species of shrub or small tree in the family Phyllanthaceae. It is found in Southeast Asia, including the Nicobar, Andaman and Paracel Islands. There are some traditional medicinal uses for plant, particularly around care after childbirth. The shrub is often a pioneer species, tolerant of full sun, but intolerant of frequent fires.

Aporosa villosa
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Malpighiales
Family: Phyllanthaceae
Genus: Aporosa
Species:
A. villosa
Binomial name
Aporosa villosa
Synonyms[1]
  • Aporosa sphaerosperma Gagnep.
  • Lepidostachys villosa Wall.
  • Scepa villosa Lindl.

Description edit

This grows as a shrub, or small tree, up to 15m tall and 15 cm in diameter, sometimes deciduous.[2] Black to light-brown bark with vertical cracks or grooves. Densely tomentose young branches. Ovate to elliptic leaves some 8.5-30 x 6–12.5 cm in size, with a slightly cordate to rounded base, small hairy basal glands, (lowly) glandular-crenate to lowly glandular-serrate margin with regular distinct blackish marginal glands. The leaves have an acute to acuminate apex, the sometimes brittle, thickish blade which when dry is corrugate-reticulate on the upper surface while the lower surface is smooth. The upper surface of the leaves dry to a greyish- to greenish-brown, occasionally bluish-green, while the lower surface dries to reddish brown.

Distinguishing traits include: the branchlets often have thick scars of fallen leaves; the leaf shape, margins and base. However Schot warns that only the extreme forms of A. villosa leaves are really distinct, otherwise intermediates occur between this species and Aporosa octandra.

Like other species in the Appendiculatae section of the Aporosa genus, this species has: glands that are basal and adaxial; disc-like glands scattered unevenly within arches of marginal veins throughout the abaxial surface of the leaf/lamina; stigma that are papillate; and the ovary has pubescent septae and column.[3]

Taxonomy and history edit

A. villosa is in a clade with sisters Aporosa ficifolia, Aporosa octandra, A. planchoniana, and A. tetrapleura, separated from other species within the Appendiculatae section of the Aporosa genus.[3]

The species was described in 1858 by Henri Ernest Baillon (1827–95), a French botanist, physician, and member of the Légion d'honneur. He published the description in his work Etude Générale du Groupe de Euphorbiacées.[4]

Distribution edit

The species is native to Mainland Southeast Asia.[1] Countries and regions in which it grows include: Thailand; Cambodia; Vietnam; Laos; Myanmar; and India (Nicobar Islands, Andaman Islands). It grows on the disputed Dong Dao Island in the South China Sea.[5] It has been recorded in error from Zhōngguó/China.[1]

Habitat and ecology edit

The tree can germinate under full sunlight, and is a pioneer species of early successional stages, it is spread by humans and birds.[6]

Frequent burning (7 or more fires in 10 years) occur in many places in the dry dipterocarp forest of the Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuary (northwestern Thailand).[7] In these frequently burnt areas A. villosa is absent, yet it is common in areas with a less frequent burning regime.

Trees identified in a plot at Salawin Wildlife Sanctuary (Mae Hong Son Province, northwestern Thailand) were Anneslea fragrans, A. villosa, Craibiodendron stellatum, Dillenia sp., Gardenia sootepensis, Gluta usitata, Quercus sp., Shorea obtusa, Tristaniopsis burmanica var. rufescens. and Vaccinium sprengelii.[8] Of these ten species only one did not have bark covered densely with bryophytes or lichen, this was A. villosa, which had consistently naked bark, it was the only tree that was not a host for the orchid Dendrobium scabrilingue.

The tree is one of four dominant species (Scaevola sericea, Messerschmidia argentea, Guettarda speciosa, A. villosa) growing on the sand barriers of Dong Dao Island, South China Sea.[5]

The species has been identified as a host of the leaf-spot/lesion-causing sac-fungus (Mycosphaerellaceae family) Zasmidium aporosae in Laos.[9]

Vernacular names edit

Uses edit

Villagers living on the plateau of Phnom Kulen National Park, in Svay Leu District, Siem Reap Province, northwestern Cambodia, use parts of the shrub in their traditional medicinal practices.[10] The wood chips and root, either alone or in different mixtures with other species, are made into decoctions to drink as part of post-childbirth care, while a mixture of the 2 plant parts, together with root/woodchips of Prismatomeris tetrandra, and the wood chips of Melastoma sp., Rhodomytrus sp. puach toich, and Rhodomyrtus tomentosa is decocted and drunk to encourage lactation.

The Bunong people of Mondulkiri Province, northeastern Cambodia, use the leaves and bark of the plant to treat a variety of illnesses.[11] The leaves are decocted in water then drunk, applied to the stomach, bathed in or used in a steam-bath, macerated in alcohol and drunk, or made into a decocted mixture with the leaves of Ageratum conyzoides, Blumea balsamifera, Chromolaena odorata and Melicope pteleifolia and used in a steam-bath. In one treatment to strengthen the body after childbirth the leaves and wood of the species are boiled together and then drunk or applied to the body.

Further reading edit

  • Chakrabarty & Balakrishnan, 2018, Indo-Burmese Phyllanthaceae: A Taxonomic Revision [cites as Aporosa octandra][1]
  • Chayamarit & Van Welzen, 2005, 'Euphorbiaceae (Genera A-F)', Flora of Thailand 8(1)
  • Govaerts, 1995, World Checklist of Seed Plants 1(1, 2)
  • Govaerts et al., 2000, World Checklist and Bibliography of Euphorbiaceae (and Pandaceae)
  • Pandey, 2009, 'Floristic diversity of Ferrargunj forest area in South Andaman', Journal of Economic and Taxonomic Botany, 33:747-768.
  • Pandey & Dilwakar, 2008, 'An integrated check-list flora of Andaman and Nicobar islands', India Journal of Economic and Taxonomic Botany. 32:403-500.
  • Schot, Anne M., 2004, 'Systematics of Aporosa (Euphorbiaceae)', Blumea, Supplement 17:1-381.
  • Wu, Raven, & Hong, 2008, Flora of China 11

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Aporosa villosa (Lindl.) Baill". Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  2. ^ Schot, Anne Marketta (2004). Systematics of Aporosa (Euphorbiaceae) (PDF). Netherlands: PhD thesis, Universiteit Leiden. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  3. ^ a b Shuichiro Tagane; Van Son Dang; Hironori Toyama; Akiyo Naiki; Hidetoshi Nagamasu; Tetsukazu Yahara; Hop Tran (2015). "Aporosa tetragona Tagane & V. S. Dang (Phyllanthaceae), a new species from Mt. Hon Ba, Vietnam". PhytoKeys (57): 51–60. doi:10.3897/phytokeys.57.6347. PMC 4698514. PMID 26752961.
  4. ^ "Aporosa villosa Baill., Étude Euphorb. 645 (1858)". International Plant Name Index (IPNI). The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  5. ^ a b Liu, Xiaodong (2008). "A 1,100-year palaeoenvironmental record inferred from stable isotope and trace element compositions of ostracode and plant caryopses in sediments of Cattle Pond, Dongdao Island, South China Sea". J Paleolimnol. 40 (4): 987–1002. Bibcode:2008JPall..40..987L. doi:10.1007/s10933-008-9211-9. S2CID 129797904. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  6. ^ Junsongduang, Auemporn; with four others (2014). "Woody Plant Diversity in Sacred Forests and Fallows in Chiang Mai, Thailand". Chiang Mai J. Sci. 41 (5.1): 1132–1149. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  7. ^ Wanthongchai, Kobsak; Bauhus, Jürgen; Goldammer, Johann G. (2014). "Effects of Past Burning Frequency on Woody Plant Structure and Composition in Dry Dipterocarp Forest". Thai J. For. 33 (3): 109–130. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  8. ^ Watthana, Santi; Pedersen, Henrik Ærenlund (2008). "Phorophyte Diversity, Substrate Requirements and Fruit Set in Dendrobium scabrilingue Lindl. (Asparagales: Orchidaceae): Basic Observations for Re-introduction Experiments". The Natural History Journal of Chulalongkorn University. 8 (2, October): 135–142. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  9. ^ Phengsintham, Pheng; Hyde, Kevin D.; Braun, Uwe (2009). "Cercospora and allied genera from Laos – 1: Notes on Zasmidium (Stenella s. lat.)" (PDF). Cryptogamie, Mycologie. 30 (3): 243–262. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  10. ^ Walker, Taylor J. (26 April 2017). An examination of medicinal ethnobotany and biomedicine use in two villages on the Phnom Kulen plateau (Report). Roanoke, United States: Undergraduate Research Awards, Hollins University. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  11. ^ Chassagne, François; Hul, Sovanmoly; Deharo, Eric; Bourdy, Geneviève (2016). "Natural remedies used by Bunong people in Mondulkiri province (NortheastCambodia) with special reference to the treatment of 11 most common ailments". Journal of Ethnopharmacology. 191: 41–70. doi:10.1016/j.jep.2016.06.003. Retrieved 2 March 2021.

aporosa, villosa, species, shrub, small, tree, family, phyllanthaceae, found, southeast, asia, including, nicobar, andaman, paracel, islands, there, some, traditional, medicinal, uses, plant, particularly, around, care, after, childbirth, shrub, often, pioneer. Aporosa villosa is a species of shrub or small tree in the family Phyllanthaceae It is found in Southeast Asia including the Nicobar Andaman and Paracel Islands There are some traditional medicinal uses for plant particularly around care after childbirth The shrub is often a pioneer species tolerant of full sun but intolerant of frequent fires Aporosa villosa Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Eudicots Clade Rosids Order Malpighiales Family Phyllanthaceae Genus Aporosa Species A villosa Binomial name Aporosa villosa Lindl Baill Synonyms 1 Aporosa sphaerosperma Gagnep Lepidostachys villosa Wall Scepa villosa Lindl Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy and history 3 Distribution 4 Habitat and ecology 5 Vernacular names 6 Uses 7 Further reading 8 ReferencesDescription editThis grows as a shrub or small tree up to 15m tall and 15 cm in diameter sometimes deciduous 2 Black to light brown bark with vertical cracks or grooves Densely tomentose young branches Ovate to elliptic leaves some 8 5 30 x 6 12 5 cm in size with a slightly cordate to rounded base small hairy basal glands lowly glandular crenate to lowly glandular serrate margin with regular distinct blackish marginal glands The leaves have an acute to acuminate apex the sometimes brittle thickish blade which when dry is corrugate reticulate on the upper surface while the lower surface is smooth The upper surface of the leaves dry to a greyish to greenish brown occasionally bluish green while the lower surface dries to reddish brown Distinguishing traits include the branchlets often have thick scars of fallen leaves the leaf shape margins and base However Schot warns that only the extreme forms of A villosa leaves are really distinct otherwise intermediates occur between this species and Aporosa octandra Like other species in the Appendiculatae section of the Aporosa genus this species has glands that are basal and adaxial disc like glands scattered unevenly within arches of marginal veins throughout the abaxial surface of the leaf lamina stigma that are papillate and the ovary has pubescent septae and column 3 Taxonomy and history editA villosa is in a clade with sisters Aporosa ficifolia Aporosa octandra A planchoniana and A tetrapleura separated from other species within the Appendiculatae section of the Aporosa genus 3 The species was described in 1858 by Henri Ernest Baillon 1827 95 a French botanist physician and member of the Legion d honneur He published the description in his work Etude Generale du Groupe de Euphorbiacees 4 Distribution editThe species is native to Mainland Southeast Asia 1 Countries and regions in which it grows include Thailand Cambodia Vietnam Laos Myanmar and India Nicobar Islands Andaman Islands It grows on the disputed Dong Dao Island in the South China Sea 5 It has been recorded in error from Zhōngguo China 1 Habitat and ecology editThe tree can germinate under full sunlight and is a pioneer species of early successional stages it is spread by humans and birds 6 Frequent burning 7 or more fires in 10 years occur in many places in the dry dipterocarp forest of the Huai Kha Khaeng Wildlife Sanctuary northwestern Thailand 7 In these frequently burnt areas A villosa is absent yet it is common in areas with a less frequent burning regime Trees identified in a plot at Salawin Wildlife Sanctuary Mae Hong Son Province northwestern Thailand were Anneslea fragrans A villosa Craibiodendron stellatum Dillenia sp Gardenia sootepensis Gluta usitata Quercus sp Shorea obtusa Tristaniopsis burmanica var rufescens and Vaccinium sprengelii 8 Of these ten species only one did not have bark covered densely with bryophytes or lichen this was A villosa which had consistently naked bark it was the only tree that was not a host for the orchid Dendrobium scabrilingue The tree is one of four dominant species Scaevola sericea Messerschmidia argentea Guettarda speciosa A villosa growing on the sand barriers of Dong Dao Island South China Sea 5 The species has been identified as a host of the leaf spot lesion causing sac fungus Mycosphaerellaceae family Zasmidium aporosae in Laos 9 Vernacular names editehmuxdold Thai language ក ក ង krong Khmer language tarm ngong tarm tree shrub or plant Bunong Cambodia 毛银柴 mao yin chai Standard Chinese Uses editVillagers living on the plateau of Phnom Kulen National Park in Svay Leu District Siem Reap Province northwestern Cambodia use parts of the shrub in their traditional medicinal practices 10 The wood chips and root either alone or in different mixtures with other species are made into decoctions to drink as part of post childbirth care while a mixture of the 2 plant parts together with root woodchips of Prismatomeris tetrandra and the wood chips of Melastoma sp Rhodomytrus sp puach toich and Rhodomyrtus tomentosa is decocted and drunk to encourage lactation The Bunong people of Mondulkiri Province northeastern Cambodia use the leaves and bark of the plant to treat a variety of illnesses 11 The leaves are decocted in water then drunk applied to the stomach bathed in or used in a steam bath macerated in alcohol and drunk or made into a decocted mixture with the leaves of Ageratum conyzoides Blumea balsamifera Chromolaena odorata and Melicope pteleifolia and used in a steam bath In one treatment to strengthen the body after childbirth the leaves and wood of the species are boiled together and then drunk or applied to the body Further reading editChakrabarty amp Balakrishnan 2018 Indo Burmese Phyllanthaceae A Taxonomic Revision cites as Aporosa octandra 1 Chayamarit amp Van Welzen 2005 Euphorbiaceae Genera A F Flora of Thailand 8 1 Govaerts 1995 World Checklist of Seed Plants 1 1 2 Govaerts et al 2000 World Checklist and Bibliography of Euphorbiaceae and Pandaceae Pandey 2009 Floristic diversity of Ferrargunj forest area in South Andaman Journal of Economic and Taxonomic Botany 33 747 768 Pandey amp Dilwakar 2008 An integrated check list flora of Andaman and Nicobar islands India Journal of Economic and Taxonomic Botany 32 403 500 Schot Anne M 2004 Systematics of Aporosa Euphorbiaceae Blumea Supplement 17 1 381 Wu Raven amp Hong 2008 Flora of China 11References edit a b c d Aporosa villosa Lindl Baill Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 1 March 2021 Schot Anne Marketta 2004 Systematics of Aporosa Euphorbiaceae PDF Netherlands PhD thesis Universiteit Leiden Retrieved 21 February 2021 a b Shuichiro Tagane Van Son Dang Hironori Toyama Akiyo Naiki Hidetoshi Nagamasu Tetsukazu Yahara Hop Tran 2015 Aporosa tetragona Tagane amp V S Dang Phyllanthaceae a new species from Mt Hon Ba Vietnam PhytoKeys 57 51 60 doi 10 3897 phytokeys 57 6347 PMC 4698514 PMID 26752961 Aporosa villosa Baill Etude Euphorb 645 1858 International Plant Name Index IPNI The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 1 March 2021 a b Liu Xiaodong 2008 A 1 100 year palaeoenvironmental record inferred from stable isotope and trace element compositions of ostracode and plant caryopses in sediments of Cattle Pond Dongdao Island South China Sea J Paleolimnol 40 4 987 1002 Bibcode 2008JPall 40 987L doi 10 1007 s10933 008 9211 9 S2CID 129797904 Retrieved 2 March 2021 Junsongduang Auemporn with four others 2014 Woody Plant Diversity in Sacred Forests and Fallows in Chiang Mai Thailand Chiang Mai J Sci 41 5 1 1132 1149 Retrieved 2 March 2021 Wanthongchai Kobsak Bauhus Jurgen Goldammer Johann G 2014 Effects of Past Burning Frequency on Woody Plant Structure and Composition in Dry Dipterocarp Forest Thai J For 33 3 109 130 Retrieved 2 March 2021 Watthana Santi Pedersen Henrik AErenlund 2008 Phorophyte Diversity Substrate Requirements and Fruit Set in Dendrobium scabrilingue Lindl Asparagales Orchidaceae Basic Observations for Re introduction Experiments The Natural History Journal of Chulalongkorn University 8 2 October 135 142 Retrieved 2 March 2021 Phengsintham Pheng Hyde Kevin D Braun Uwe 2009 Cercospora and allied genera from Laos 1 Notes on Zasmidium Stenella s lat PDF Cryptogamie Mycologie 30 3 243 262 Retrieved 2 March 2021 Walker Taylor J 26 April 2017 An examination of medicinal ethnobotany and biomedicine use in two villages on the Phnom Kulen plateau Report Roanoke United States Undergraduate Research Awards Hollins University Retrieved 27 April 2020 Chassagne Francois Hul Sovanmoly Deharo Eric Bourdy Genevieve 2016 Natural remedies used by Bunong people in Mondulkiri province NortheastCambodia with special reference to the treatment of 11 most common ailments Journal of Ethnopharmacology 191 41 70 doi 10 1016 j jep 2016 06 003 Retrieved 2 March 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aporosa villosa amp oldid 1218781209, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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