Desert fruits
Desert fruits
Desert fruits The hostile environment in the Thar desert has been home to one of the finest biodiversity in India |
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BOTANICAL NAME | LOCAL NAME | PARTS USED | MEDICINAL USE |
Zizyphus nummularia | Jhadbar | Fruit edible; leaves used as fodder; wood as fuel | Fruit as astringent; dried leaves for treating |
Zizyphus mauritiana | Boradi | Fruit edible; wood used to make farming tools | - |
Cordia dichotoma | Gonda/lasora | Unripe fruit edible; used to make pickles; ripe fruit fermented to make liquor; leaves used to make fibres; wood used as fuel and to make farming tools, furniture, combs | As diuretic and anthelminthic |
Cordia gharaf | gondi | Fruit edible | - |
Capparis decidua | ker | Fruits used as pickle; twigs as fooder; wood as fuel and to make tools, cart wheels and ploughs | Tender branches used to relieve toothache |
Salvadora oleoides | Pilu | Fruit edible; seeds used to make candles and soaps | Leaves and fruit used to treat enlarged spleen, rheumatism and fever |
Salvadora persica | mustard | Fruit edible; leaves used as a vegetable, tender shoots as salad; wood used to repel mosquitoes | Lead decoction used to treat asthama and cough; a poultice of leaves is used to treat painful tumors and piles, stem used for dental care |
Prosopis cineraria | Khejri | Unripe pods used as vegetables; bark mixed in flour during famine; leaves used as animal fodder, wood used as firewood and to make farming tools | Flowers used to prevent miscarriage |
Acacia senegal | Kumat | Gum from the bark used in food and beverage, pharmaceuticals and confectionar; seed to make curry; leaves as fodder | Gum used to treat inflamed surfaces; root to treat dysentery, gonorrhoea and nodular leprosy |
Grewia tenax | Gangeran | Fruits edible; leaves used as animal fodder | Decoction of wood is used for treating cough |
Grewia villosa | Gangeti | Fruits and leaves used for making walking sticks and bows | Root used to cure diarhoea and small pox |
Rhus mysorensis | Dansaro | Fruit and leaves edible; leaves used as fodder; bark and leaves used for tanning leather; wood used as fencing and making tool handles | - |
Source: O P Pareek and S Sharma, 1994 |
Publication Date:
30/08/1998
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