Khaleej Times

Officer rediscover­s ‘extinct’ medicinal plant

- IANS

guwahati — Over a century after it was first documented and feared to have gone extinct, a rare plant species that contains anti-carcinogen­ic properties has been rediscover­ed by a forest officer in Assam.

Popularly known in Assamese as Gandheli, the plant species, Nothapodyt­es nimmoniana, was rediscover­ed by Forest Officer Jatindra Sarma recently in the Borjan area in eastern Assam’s Tinsukia district.

The plant was first documented by botanist UN Kanjilal in 1914. Its occurrence was last mentioned by Kanjilal in his book “Flora of Assam”, published in 1934.

“The plant is the richest source of Camptothec­in and it is the world’s third-most important plantbased bio-molecule for treating ovarian and colon cancers, besides its use against HIV virus,” said Sarma, adding that he and his team had undertaken several botanical exploratio­ns before confirming it to be the plant.

“The plant species possesses various bio-active substances like Camptothec­in, an anti-cancer alkaloid,” said Sarma, who recently published “Medicinal Plants and Mushrooms of India with Special Reference to Assam”. The book has documented close to 1,400 medicinal and aromatic plant species as well as wild mushrooms that are found in abundance in the wilderness of Assam, with a special focus on their medicinal properties.

He said that the plant, which belongs to the family of icacinacea­e, is a small tree largely found in tropical America and in parts of China and Sri Lanka. “In India, it is found in the western parts of the country in the Nilgiri mountains and Mysore. Due to over-collection and massive destructio­n of habitat, the species was declared endangered,” Sarma said. He said that Camptothec­in found in Gandheli is a new class of chemothera­peutic agent which has special cytotoxic properties that damage cancel cells. —

 ??  ?? Gandheli is a rare plant species
Gandheli is a rare plant species

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