Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Berberis napaulensis

Species of shrub From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Berberis napaulensis
Remove ads

Berberis napaulensis Nepali: जमाने मान्द्रो is a shrub in the family Berberidaceae described as a species in 1821. It is native to China (Tibet, Yunnan, Guangxi, and Sichuan) and the Himalayas (Nepal, Bhutan, Sikkim, Assam, Myanmar).[1][2] This species is used medicinally throughout the Sikkim Eastern Himalayas.[3]

Quick facts Scientific classification, Binomial name ...
Remove ads

Description

Thumb
Labeled as Mahonia duclouxiana - San Francisco Botanical Garden

Berberis napaulensis is a shrub or small tree that can be 1–7 meters tall. Leaves are up to 61 centimeters long, with 5-12 pairs of leaflets plus a larger terminal leaflet, all shiny above, yellowish-green below. Flowers are yellow, borne in a large panicle. Berries are spherical, deep purple, 5–7 millimeters in diameter.[1]

Remove ads

Taxonomy

Summarize
Perspective

Berberis napaulensis was initially scientifically described and named by Augustin Pyramus de Candolle as Mahonia napaulensis in 1821.[4][5] As part of a long running debate between botanists on if Mahonia should be a synonym of Berberis, Kurt Polycarp Joachim Sprengel classified it as Berberis napaulensis in 1825.[4] A paper was published by Joseph Edward Laferrière in 1997 summarized the arguments in favor of Berberis as the correct classification. As of 2023 this is the most common classification by botanists.[4][6]

Subspecies

Thumb
Berberis napaulensis

As of 2023 there are two recognized subspecies the former Mahonia pycnophylla and the autonym. There are botanical synonyms listed by Plants of the World Online for each of the subspecies recognized there, a very large number in the case of Berberis napaulensis var. napaulensis.

Berberis napaulensis var. napaulensis[7]

  • Berberis acanthifolia Wall. ex Walp.
  • Berberis annamica (Gagnep.) Laferr.
  • Berberis borealis (Takeda) Laferr.
  • Berberis borealis var. parryi (Ahrendt) Laferr.
  • Berberis dolichostylis (Takeda) Laferr.
  • Berberis duclouxiana (Gagnep.) Laferr.
  • Berberis duclouxiana var. hilaica (Ahrendt) Laferr.
  • Berberis flavida (C.K.Schneid.) Laferr.
  • Berberis flavida var. integrifoliola (Hand.-Mazz.) Laferr.
  • Berberis gautamae Laferr.
  • Berberis griffithii (Takeda) Laferr.
  • Berberis intermedia (A.Vilm.) Anon.
  • Berberis keikoe Laferr.
  • Berberis leschenaultii Wall. ex Wight & Arn.
  • Berberis longlinensis (Y.S.Wang & P.G.Xiao) Laferr.
  • Berberis manipurensis (Takeda) Laferr.
  • Berberis miccia Buch.-Ham. ex D.Don
  • Berberis napaulensis var. leschenaultii (Wall. ex Wight & Arn.) Hook.f. & Thomson
  • Berberis pomensis (Ahrendt) Laferr.
  • Berberis salweenensis (Ahrendt) Laferr.
  • Berberis siamensis (Takeda) Laferr.
  • Berberis tsailunii Laferr.
  • Mahonia acanthifolia Wall. ex G.Don
  • Mahonia annamica Gagnep.
  • Mahonia borealis Takeda
  • Mahonia borealis var. perryi Ahrendt
  • Mahonia dolichostylis Takeda
  • Mahonia duclouxiana Gagnep.
  • Mahonia duclouxiana var. hilaica Ahrendt
  • Mahonia flavida C.K.Schneid.
  • Mahonia flavida f. integrifolia Hand.-Mazz.
  • Mahonia griffithii Takeda
  • Mahonia intermedia A.Vilm.
  • Mahonia leschenaultii (Wall. ex Wight & Arn.) Anon.
  • Mahonia longlinensis Y.S.Wang & P.G.Xiao
  • Mahonia mairei Takeda
  • Mahonia manipurensis Takeda
  • Mahonia napaulensis var. leschenaultii (Wall. ex Wight & Arn.) Fedde
  • Mahonia nepalensis DC. ex Dippel
  • Mahonia pomensis Ahrendt
  • Mahonia salweenensis Ahrendt
  • Mahonia siamensis Takeda
  • Mahonia sikkimensis Takeda

Berberis napaulensis var. pycnophylla (Fedde) Laferr.[8]

  • Mahonia napaulensis var. pycnophylla Fedde
  • Mahonia pycnophylla (Fedde) Takeda
Remove ads

Ecology

In Chiang Mai Province, Thailand, a species of rust fungus Pucciniosira cornuta (synonym of Gambleola cornuta Massee (1898)) infects Berberis nepalensis.[9]

Traditional uses

In the Nilgiris, it is of religious and medicinal importance to the native Toda people of Tamil Nadu, who call it "Thovari" in their language. They use a paste made of the bark as a Traditional medicine remedy for women immediately after childbirth. The Toda also use a water extracted from the leaves to purify their temples after women have entered them, as women are forbidden from Toda temples.[10]

Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads