Pistacia integerrima explained
Pistacia integerrima is a species of pistachio tree native to Asia, commonly called zebrawood. It is often classified as Pistacia chinensis ssp. integerrima.[1] It is used for a variety of purposes in India, including timber, dye, and fodder.[2] The leaf galls are used in traditional herbalism for cough, asthma, fever, vomiting, and diarrhea.[2] [3]
Long, horn-shaped leaf galls that often develop on this tree are harvested and used to make kakadshringi, an herbal medicine for diarrhea in northern India.[3]
This tree is also used as a rootstock in the cultivation of commercial pistachios.[4]
Notes and References
- Web site: The Plant List: A Working List of All Plant Species . 21 November 2014.
- Pant, S. and S. S. Samant. (2010). Ethnobotanical observations in the Mornaula Reserve Forest of Kumoun, West Himalaya, India. Ethnobotanical Leaflets 14 193.
- Upadhye, A. S. and A. A. Rajopadhye. (2010). Pharmacognostic and phytochemical evaluation of leaf galls of Kakadshringi used in Indian system of medicine. Journal of Scientific and Industrial Research 69 700.
- Nikpeyma, Y., et al. Budding success of Pistacia integerrima on different Pistacia rootstocks. ISHS Acta Horticulturae 470: II International Symposium on Pistachios and Almonds.