champa - golden champa

champa - golden champa

Michelia champaca

Summary

Scientific Classification

Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnolipsida
Order: Magnoliales
Family: Magnoliaceae
Genus: Michelia
Species: M.champaca
Scientific Name: Michelia champacaL.

Common names
English : Champa, Golden Champa.
Hindi: Champa.
Kannada: Sampige.
Marathi: Pivalu Champa.

Discription

  1. Habit and Habitat: Champa is very well known flower native to the Himalayas, and popular for its fragrant flowers. It is a tree up to 50 m or taller, up to 1.9 mTrees, buttressed, up to 30 m tall.
  2. Distribution: Champa is found in the Himalayas, up to NE India and SE Asia, at altitudes of 600-1300 m. native to the Indomalaya ecozone, consisting of South Asia, Southeast Asia−Indochina, and southern China.It is found in Tropical and subtropical moist broad leaf forests.
  3. Morphology:
    Leaf: : Leaves simple, alternate, spiral; petiole 1-3 cm long, stout and planoconvex in cross section; lamina 9.5-25 x 3.5-9 cm, elliptic-lanceolate, apex acuminate with twisted acumen, base acute to attenuate, margin slightly undulate, glabrous, chartaceous; midrib nearly flat above; secondary nerves 12-16 pairs; tertiary nerves closely and strongly reticulate.
    Inflorescence: solitary, axillary.
    Flowers: Flowers solitary, axillary, large, yellow, fragrantUsually nine tepals, 3 whorls of 3 each; either all the 3 whorls petalloid or sometimes the outermost of 3 tepals becomes sepaloid than calyx and corolla and described as under.
    Androecium: Indefinite, polyandrous, spirally arranged, distinguished into filament, connective and anther lobes, dithecous, basifixed, dehiscence longitudinal, extrorse.
    Gynoecium: Polycarpellary, apocarpous; superior; spirally arranged on a cone like and elongated thalamus; each carpel with a swollen ovary, curved style and beaked and simple stigma, unilocular; placentation marginal, many ovules in each carpel.
    Fruit: An etaerio of follicles, dark coloured with white specks.
    Seeds: Seeds 2-4 per carpel, rugose.
    Flowering and Fruiting time: February -June.
  4. Propagation: Through seeds,Grafting,Cuttings.
  5. Importance:
    a.it is used for worship at temples whether at home or out, and more generally worn in hair by girls and women as a means of beauty ornament as well as a natural perfume.
    b.The tree was traditionally used to make fragrant hair and massage oils.
    c.wood, which is used in furniture making, construction, and cabinetry.
    d.The bark is used as a febrifuge.
    e.A decoction of the bark and leaves is given after child birth.
    f.The flowers are used to treat leprosy.
    g.The leaves are used as a treatment against colic.
    h.Soil under tree cover shows an increase in pH, soil organic carbon and available phosphorus.

  6. Location: avenue, library-gymkhana,Office area.

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