Ethnobotanical Studies of Some Important Ferns
Kamini Srivastava
Lecturer, Department of Botany
c/o
Prof. P.K. Khare
Allahabad-211002,
E-mail: versatilekamini@rediffmail.com
Abstract
The ethnomedicinal
value of ferns, used by the tribals of India such as Baiga, Gond, Korawa, Kanwar,
Tanwar, Manjhwar, Oraon, Manjhi, Dhanwar, Binjihwar, Agariya, Pando and other people
of the world is focused on in the present paper. The tribals
frequently use ferns as medicines for the cure of various ailments. The
information gathered from them (and also collected from other sources) is herein
described.
Key Words: Ethnomedicinal uses, ferns.
Introduction
Ethnobotanical
studies have attracted a number of field workers in recent years and they have
supplied a lot of information about different uses of plants prevalent among
the various tribes and natives of
Observations
During the collection of Pteridophytes from almost all over the country, the author
came to know about the medicinal value of certain ferns from the local
inhabitants belonging to the tribes of India such as Baiga,
Gond, Korawa, Kanwar, Tanwar, Manjhwar, Oraon, Manjhi, Dhanwar, Binjihwar, Agariya, Pando and others .
The tribals treat various diseases and
disorders by using the following ferns available around their ambient
vegetation. They prepare paste, decoction, aqueous extract, powder and juice
from a single plant or in combination with different parts of other plants. The
following species of ferns are commonly used for medicine and food by the tribals:
Adiantum Capillus
veneris (Linn.) (Fam-Pteridaceae)
Common name –: Maiden hair fern, Avenca, Herba capillorum veneris, Ladies' hair, Venus hair fern, Indian name: Hans Raj.
Rhizome short to suberect,
covered with brown scales and hairs. Fronds bipinnate,
petiole and racheae shining and brown in colour, with 5-6 secondary pinnules,
rhomboidal in shape with 3-8 deeply cut lobe. Sori
marginal with soral flaps infolded, semicircular to
transversely elongated,2-3 mm broad.
Distribution:
Uses: The maidenhair fern
has a long history of medicinal use and was the main ingredient of a popular
cough syrup called 'Capillaire', which remained in
use until the nineteenth century. The fresh or dried leafy fronds are
antidandruff, antitussive, astringent, demulcent,
depurative, emetic, weakly emmenagogue, emollient,
weakly expectorant, febrifuge, galactogogue,
laxative, pectoral, refrigerant, stimulant, sudorific
and tonic. A tea or syrup is used in the treatment of coughs, throat
afflictions and bronchitis. It is also used as a detoxicant in alcoholism and to expel worms from the
body. Externally, it is used as a poultice on snake bites, bee stings etc,. In
Adiantum philippense
(Linn.) (Fam-Pteridaceae)
Common name – English name: Maiden hair fern, Indian name: Kalijhant
Roots thin and fibrous,petiole smooth with brown black hairs at base,fronds up to 25 cm long with half moon shaped pinnules. Sori marginal and discontinuous.
Distribution:
Uses: Decoction of roots
and rhizomes is used in fever. It is also useful in dysentery (15).
Angiopteris evecta
(Hoffm.) (Fam – Marattiaceae)
Common name – English name: Giant fern, Yapese name: Mong, Pohnpeian name: Peiwed (Poaiwed), Paiued, Chuukese name: Ammarre (chuuk lagoon).
Large sized ferns, rhizome short,
broad, massive fleshy stock; fronds very large, bipinnate,
springing from between two fleshy stipulae form
appendages, stipes fleshy, green, swollen at the
base; pinnae attached to the main rachis by swollen
bases; pinnules attached to the pinnae
by short swollen bases; pinnules attached to the pinnae by short swollen stalks; veins free, 6 recurrent
veins, running from the margin between the true veins-sori
of two close rows of sporangia attached along a vein near its apex, sporangia
dehiscing along slits on the side facing the vein.
Distribution: Throughout the Indian region upto
7,000 feet elevation, also in
Uses: In the southern highlands of
Botrychium lunaria (Sw.) (Fam – Ophioglossaceae)
Common name – English name: Moonwort, French name: Herbe aux serpents, Petite lunaire,
German name: Walpurgiskraut, Italian name: Vindicta.
Rhizome small,
enclosed by brown sheaths and bearing stoutish
branched roots, which are fleshy when fresh but brittle when dry. Stalk
long, erect, smooth which is cylindrical hollow and
succulent. Vernation of both the fertile and sterile segments erect.
Distribution:
Fronds solitary, long, firm and
fleshy; sterile branch pinnate, oblong, pinnae
sessile, flabellate and often over lapping; veins flabellately
forked. Fertile stalk long; fruiting spike racemose
or paniculate; sporangia sessile, circular, brown,
arranged in two rows on the dorsal face of the spike.
Uses: Botrychium lunaria used as
a good vulnerary and also used in dysentery in
Botrychium ternatum (Sw.) (Fam – Ophioglossaceae)
Chinese name: Yin Ti Chueh
Plants 18-75 cm high; common stalk
1-5 cm long; sterile stalk 4-20 cm long; sterile blade deltoid, tripinnate to quadripinatifid,
stalk of the pinnae long; sterile blade deltoid, tripinnate to quadripinnatifid,
stalk of the pinnae long; sterile blade deltoid, tripinnate to quadripinnatifid,
stalk of the pinnae long, apex acutish,
veins simple or forked; fertile stalk 13-21 cm long, fruiting spike, deltoid,
profusely compound.
Distribution: Near Simla,
Uses: The plant is used as a vulnerary and the root is prescribed
in dysentery in
Botrychium virginianum (Sw.) (Fam – Ophioglossaceae)
Common name: Rattle snake fern, Grape fern, Indicator, Sang-Sign.
Stipes
3-18 inches long, sterile portion not prolonged beyond the fertile spike 4-12
inches each way; deltoid, quadripinnatifid, lower pinnae much the largest, pinnules
ovate-oblong, close cut down to a broadly winged rachis into finely cut
linear-oblong segments, both sides naked or slightly hairy; fertile branch of
the rachis springing from the base of the sterile portion (i.e. sterile
portion, sessile), or from the middle of it.
Distribution: South India, at the higher elevations on the western
mountains (only appearing in the rains); Ceylon, about Newera
Elya; North India, on the Himalayas, Kumaon to Bhotan, 5,000-8,000
feet elevation, Khasya, 4,000-6,000 feet elevation. Also widespread in
Uses: Botrychium virginanum is
used in dysentery in
Dicranopteris linearis (Retz.) (Sw.)
(Fam –Gleicheniaceae)
Common name –Malay name: Resam, Indian
name: Raj hans
Rhizome long, creeping with their tips covered
with dense scale, fronds big, stiff and dichotomousely
branched, stipe hard, brownish 1.5-2 m long. Apical
bud usually dormant, covered with broad ovate stipules. Sori
globose, yellowish and present in a single row on
both sides of the costules, spores minute, hyaline.
Uses: Young circinately vernated leaves mixed with cow milk used seven days
continuously to remove sterility in women. Petiole and racheae
are used in thatching the huts and widely sold as writing pens (
Helminthostachys zeylanica (Linn.) (Fam – Ophioglossaceae)
Common name: Kamraj, Dhimraj
Rhizome thick, fleshy, creeping and
bearing many thick fleshy roots which become brittle when dry, common stalk
fleshy, 20-30 cm long, sterile frond consisting of sessile palmately
tripinnate lamina and a stalked fertile spike, and
all these four parts separate from the apex of the common stalk; margin entire
or slightly and irregularly toothed, veins fine, close, arising obliquely from
the midrib and once or twice forked, fruiting spike bearing crowded short
lateral branches, each with a sessile group of round sporangia.
Distribution:
Uses: The decoction of rhizome is used for curing impotency. The
leaf juice relieves blisters on the tongue. The young leaves are cooked as
vegetable. The powdered rhizome (5 gms)
along with cow’s milk is used for vitality and brain tonic. Its rhizome and
about 5 gms of rhizome of safed musli (chlorophytum
tuberosum Roxb. Baker.) and root of Semar musli (Bombax ceiba Linn.), are made into paste which
is given for one month for waist pain as tonic in
Lygodium flexuosum
(Linn.) Sw. (Fam –Schizaeaceae)
Fronds glabrous
or slightly hairy, pairs of fronds stipitate-pinnate
with the pinnules again pinnate or variously lobed or
subpalmate, all serrulate, sori protruding from the margine,
texture subcoriaceous.
Distribution:
Uses: The aqueous extract of the rhizome given two times a day for
7 days cures gonorrhoea and the paste of the rhizome
is applied on piles in India.(16)
Marattia salicina (Sm.) (Fam
– Marattiaceae)
Stipes
thick, smooth deciduously scaly or swollen in the lower part, fronds long, bipinnate or sometimes tripinnate,
pinnae long, pinnules
oblong-lanceolate, broad, the apex acuminate, the
base cuneate or slightly rounded, synangia
submarginal in close rows.
Distribution:
Uses The swollen caudex also used as
starvation food in highland and lowland areas of
Ophioglossum reticulatum (Linn.) (Fam – Ophioglossaceae)
Local name: Brahmi
Rhizome cylindrical to subglobose, elongate, not tuberous with many horizontal
roots; fronds one to several, sterile division placed generally below the
middle, broadly ovate, ovate-orbicular, either cordate
or broad-truncate at base, venation lax, distinctly reticulate, midrib usually
indistinct, apex blunt or acute, fertile segment including the slender peduncle
up to 20 cm long, sporangiferous portion long.
Distribution:
Uses: The paste of the leaf is applied on the forehead to get rid
of headache in
Ophioglossum vulgatum (Linn.) (Fam
– Ophioglossaceae)
Common name: English name: Adder’s Tongue, Christ’s spear -; French
name: Herbe a daucune, Herbe Sans Couture, Lance de Christ, Langue de Serpent, Luciole, ophioglosse, ophioglosse commune, petite serpentaire,
Serpentine -; Hausa name: Mashinzomo -; La Reunion
name: Herbe un coeur, Herbe paille-en-queue, Langue de
Serpent, Spanish name: Lengua de serpiente
-; Suto name: Mmadiyo, Tsebe-ngive, Tseyananyane.
Plants 8-27 cm high; rhizome
erect, cylindrical, bearing many fleshy roots, tropophyll
ovate or ovate-oblong in shape, cordate at base,
obtuse or acutish at apex, fleshy in texture, margin
entire, venation with elongated primary areoles in the mid-vein area and with
irregularly shaped closely woven small meshes with free vein-endings in the
marginal area. Fertile stalk long, usually attached almost near the middle strobilus 2-3.5 cm long.
Distribution:
Uses: The fresh leaves make a most effective and comforting
poultice for ulcers and tumors. The expressed juice of the leaves is drunk as a
treatment for internal bleeding and breusing ( American Nutrition Centre). The fresh leaves of O.
vulgatum are used as a poultice in scrofulous
ulcers and tumors, together with an infusion taken internally in wine glassful
doses. The plant is boiled in oil or fat is said to be a panacea for wounds and
to reduce inflammation. An ethnobotanical study in Nouthern
The root and the leaves are
antiseptic, detergent, emetic, haemostatic, styptic and vulnerary. An ointment
made from the plant is considered to be a good remedy for wounds and is also
used in the treatment of skin ulcers (Plants for a Future: Database Search Results). In
Discussion
With the present information it is clear that in hills and forests where majority of ferns and fern allies grow, natives frequently use their young fronds and dried rhizomes as source of food and extracts of different parts and their decoction as medicine for various ailments. The study highlights the traditional uses of ferns by the tribals in the treatment of their diseases and ailments. These data may be useful for phytochemists and pharmacologists to determine their true therapeutic compounds.It may bring to light new sources of drugs of herbal origin. Many medicinal plants are reported to be threatened to extinction of course, large number of medicinal plant species are endangered or are under immediate danger of loss, while various species are vulnerable mainly due to indiscriminate collection as well as excessive trade from natural population for commercial purpose. So there is an urgent need for their conservation. There has been much emphasis to conserve the ferns which are important for academic, medicinal and ornamental values.
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