Scientific Name
Operculina turpethum (L.) Silva Manso
Synonyms
Argyreia alulata Miq., Convolvulus anceps L., Convolvulus turpethum L., Ipomoea anceps (L.) Roem. & Schult., Ipomoea turpethum (L.) R. Br., Merremia turpethum (L.) Rendle, Merremia turpethum (L.) Bojer, Spiranthera turpethum (L.) Bojer. [1]
Vernacular Name
English | Indian jalap, turpeth-root, wood rose, boxfruit, vine, turpethum [2][3] |
China | He guo teng [3] |
India | Cimai, civatai, nasotar, nishot, nisot, nisrita, pitohri, puripakinee, shevadie, vayr, tegada, tribhundee, triputa (tri, three, puta, angle); trivrit, trivrita [3] |
Indonesia | Areuy jotang (Sundanese); sampar-kedung, balaran (Javanese) [2] |
Thailand | Chingcho liam (Northern) [2] |
Philippines | Bangbangau, laplapsut (Iloko); kamokamotihan (Tagalog) [2] |
Vietnam | Ch[if]a v[oo]I, b[if]m n[aw]p [2] |
France | Turbith vegetal [2] |
Pakistan | Nisot [3]. |
Geographical Distributions
Operculina turphetum is distributed in the Old World tropics from East Africa, the Mascarene Islands and Seychelles, through India to South and Southeast Asia, tropical Australia and Polynesia. It has not yet been recorded in Sumatra, and is rare in Peninsular Malaysia and Borneo. [2] O. turphetum is weedy, and occurs in open forests, teak forests, hedges, thickets, roadsides and waste places, occasionally in sugar cane plantations, restricted to regions with a medium or strong monsoon, from sea level up to 1300 m altitude. [2]
Botanical Description
O. turphetum is a member of the family Convolvulaceae. It is a perennial twiner, with stems 2-4 m long, narrowly 3-5-winged, grooved or angular, hairless or soft hairy at the nodes, with long rhizomes, fleshy and much branched. [2]
The leaves are arranged alternate, simple, very variable in shape, orbicular, broadly ovate, ovate to lance-shaped, and the broad leaves measure 5.5-15 cm x 4-14 cm. The narrow ones measure 5.5-7.5 cm x 1-2.5 cm, cordate to hastate at base, acuminate at apex, acute or obtuse and mucronulate. The leaf margin is entire or rarely coarsely dentate to shallowly lobed. The upper surface is hairless or appressed hairy while the lower surface is hairy. [2]
The petiole is 2.5-7.5 cm long, cylindrical or sometimes winged. The inflorescence is a few-flowered cyme. The peduncle is 2-18 cm long, cylindrical or sometimes winged, and hairless or hairy. The flowers are actinomorphic, 5-merous, with angular pedicel, 12-15(-35) mm long and pubescent. The bracts are oblong or elliptical-oblong, mucronulate, 1.5-2 cm long, pubescent and caduceus. There are 5 sepals which are free, ovate or broadly ovate and acute. The outer sepal is 1.5-2.5 cm long and pubescent outside while the inner ones are 2 cm long and hairless. The sepal in fruit is broadly cup-shaped and up to 6 cm in diametre. The petal is broadly funnel-shaped, 3-4.5 cm long, white, sometimes with yellowish base, hairless and rarely with yellowish gland hairs outside. There are 5 stamens which are inserted. The filaments are adnate to the petal and sparsely pubescent below. [2]
The fruit is a capsule, depressed-spherical, 1.5 cm in diameter and with up to 4 seeds. The epicarp is circumscissile in or above the middle. The upper part (operculum) is more or less fleshy, separating from the lower part and from the endocarp. The endocarp is scarious, longitudinally split and irregular. [2]
The seed is trigonous to globular, 6 mm long, smooth and dull black. [2]
Cultivation
No documentation
Chemical Constituent
No documentation
Plant Part Used
No documentation
Traditional Use
No documentation
Preclinical Data
No documentation
Clinical Data
No documentation
Poisonous Management
No documentation
Line Drawing
References
- The Plant List. Ver1.1. Operculina turpethum (L.) Silva Manso [homepage on the Internet]. c2013 [updated 2012 Apr 18; cited 2015 July 23]. Available from: http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/tro-8500073
- Aquilar NO. Operculina turphetum (L.) S. Manso In: van Valkenburg JLCH, Bunyapraphatsara N, editors. Plant Resources of South-East Asia No. 12(2): Medicinal and poisonous plants 2. Leiden, Netherlands: Backhuys Publisher, 2001; p. 389-391
- Quattrocchi U. CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names: Common names, scientific names, eponyms, synonyms, and etymology. Volume IV M-Q. Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press; 2012. p. 330.