Research Article | Published: 01 March 2016

Plants of Associated Botanic Garden, Botanical Survey of India, Central Regional Centre, Allahabad

Rajeev Kumar Singh

Journal of Non-Timber Forest Products | Volume: 23 | Issue: 1 | Page No. 37-54 | 2016
DOI: https://doi.org/10.54207/bsmps2000-2016-85296H | Cite this article

Abstract

The plants growing in Associated Botanic Garden, Botanical Survey of India, Central Regional Centre, Allahabad are enumerated with habit and phenology. It comprises about 663 species in all with 181 species of trees, 168 species of shrubs, 38 species of undershrubs and 276 species of herbs (including 10 aquatic plants) under 116 families.

Keywords

Allahabad, Associated Botanic Garden, Botanical Survey of India, plant species

Access Options

250/-

Buy Full Access in HTML Format

Instant access to the full article.

Get access to the full version of this article. Buy Full Access in HTML Format

References

1. Brockway, L.H. (1979). Science and colonial expansion;The role of the British Royal Botanic Gardens. Academic Press, London. https://doi.org/10.1525/ae.1979.6.3.02a00030

Google Scholar

2. Chowdhery, H.J. and Pandey, D.S. (2007). Plants of Indian Botanic Garden.Botanical Survey of India, Kolkata

Google Scholar

3. Heywood, V.H. (1983).Botanic Gardens and taxonomy – their economic role.Bull. Bot. Surv. India, 25: 134-147

Google Scholar

4. Heywood, V.H. (1987). The changing role of Botanic Gardens.In: Bramwell, D., Hamann, O., Heywood, V. and Synge, H. (Eds.), Botanic Gardens and the World Conservation Strategy, Academic Press, London

Google Scholar

5. Khoshoo, T.N. (1987). Botanic Gardens in Indian context: a case study. In: Bramwell, D., Hamann, O., Heywood, V. and Synge, H. (Eds.), Botanic Gardens and the World Conservation Strategy, Academic Press, London

6. Larsen, K., Morley, B. and Ern, H. (1987).The role of the International Association of Botanic Gardens (IABG) in conservation world-wide.In: Bramwell, D., Hamann, O., Heywood, V. and Synge, H. (Eds.), Botanic Gardens and the World Conservation Strategy, Academic Press, London

Google Scholar

7. Singh, V., Singh, R.Kr. and Gupta S.L. (2015). Diversity of climbers, trailers and parasitic plants in Botanical Garden, Botanical Survey of India, Central Regional Centre, Allahabad. Indian J. Forestry. 38(2): 195-200

Google Scholar

About this article

How to cite

Singh, R.K., 2016. Plants of Associated Botanic Garden, Botanical Survey of India, Central Regional Centre, Allahabad. Journal of Non-Timber Forest Products, 23(1), pp.37-54. https://doi.org/10.54207/bsmps2000-2016-85296H

Publication History

Manuscript Published on 01 March 2016

Share this article

Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content: