Cyclea fruit introduction and its benefits
Hello my friends, how are you all? I hope you are all well, friends. Today I am going to share with you a very beautiful vine called Cyclea. It has beautiful fruits which come in different colors. It is also used as a medicinal plant. Let's start.
- Cyclea peltata, also called patha or Indian moon-seed (not to be confused with Tinospora cordifolia or "heart-leaved moonseed", from the same family Menispermaceae), is a climbing shrub found across India and Sri Lanka, in habitats ranging from Moist Deciduous Forests to Tropical Forests and Plains.[1]
- A slender climbing vine that has alternately-arranged heart shaped leaves. Flowers between April-June and then again during November-January, depending on the local climate. Flowers are pale yellow and dioecious. Pollination is mostly through insects. The fruits are white, spherical or oval drupes.
- Cyclea peltata is used in Indigenous Indian Medicinal systems as a wound healer, an antidote to poisons, and for various digestive, skin and inflammatory disorders. It is a common component of the traditional Ayurvedic Polyherbal formulation Shaddharana Choornam, along with Plumbago zeylanica, Holarrhena antidysenterica, Picrorhiza kurroa, Aconitum heterophyllum, Terminalia chebula, Berberis aristata and Cyperus rotundus, whose formulation is mentioned in Vagbhata's Ashtāṅgasaṅgraha and Charaka's Charaka Samhita.
Photoghraphy | information |
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Country | Bangladesh |
Camera used | Oppo a5s |
Cameraman | @ashik333 |
awesome photography& nice post bro.
thank you
Brother shared awesome photography. Truly you are a skilled photographer.
thank you brother.
Presented in a very beautiful way and your photography has been very beautiful. In fact, we didn't know about the fruit. Now, after looking at your post, we came to know that it is a fruit with traditional medicinal properties. This is a huge deal.
Thank you Carrie On Brother Best of Luck for sharing an important piece of information with the Biodiversity Community.👌✌️
thank you so much bro
I saw this kind of fruit in my village. But now I knew about it by the post.
thank you bro 😍