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Pergularia daemia

Species of vine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pergularia daemia
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Pergularia daemia, the trellis-vine, is a hispid, perennial vine in the family Asclepiadaceae, with an extensive range in the Old World tropics and subtropics.[citation needed] It has been used traditionally to treat a number of ailments.[citation needed] It is sometimes called atufa.[1]

Quick Facts Scientific classification, Binomial name ...
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Range and habitat

It occurs from the Malay Peninsula to Burma, India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Afghanistan through Arabia and Egypt to central and southern Africa.[2] It is found along roadsides, in woodland or along riparian forest fringes.[3]

Description

The opposite[citation needed] and broadly ovate to suborbicular leaves are very variable in size, with petioles of varying length. The leaves are almost glabrous above and velvety below.[2]

In the northern hemisphere the flowers appear from mid to late winter, and these are carried on lateral cymes. The flower corolla forms a greenish-yellow or dull white tube.[2] The fruit mature after some 13 to 14 months[citation needed] when they release ovate seeds covered with velvety hairs.[2]

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Pergularia daemia (Trellis-vine) seeds
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Phytochemical properties

Terpenoids, flavonoids, sterols and cardenolides are among the chemicals that have been isolated from either the leaves, stems, shoots, roots, seeds or fruit.[citation needed] Traditionally it has been used as an anthelmintic, laxative, antipyretic and expectorant, besides treatment of infantile diarrhoea, malarial intermittent fevers, toothaches and colds.[citation needed] Studies have shown hepatoprotective, antifertility, anti-diabetic, analgesic, antipyretic and anti-inflammatory properties of substances in its aerial parts.[citation needed]

Associated species

The larvae of the African monarch butterfly (Danaus chrysippus aegyptius) feed on this species.

References

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