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Facts about Common Milk Hedge

Common milk hedge Quick Facts
Name: Common milk hedge
Scientific Name: Euphorbia neriifolia
Origin South Asia and normally grows around dry, rocky and hilly areas of India, in Myanmar, Thailand and Malaysia
Shapes Three chambered or 3-lobed capsules that are smooth, stigmas slightly dilated and minutely toothed with 10-12 mm in diameter
Taste Bitter, acrid
Health benefits Beneficial for whooping cough, gonorrhea, dropsy, leprosy, asthma, dyspepsia, jaundice, enlargement of the spleen, colic, stone in the bladder, of snake bite and scorpion sting
Euphorbia neriifolia commonly known as Indian Spurge Tree or Common milk hedge is a prickly, large, erect shrub belonging to Spurge family Euphorbiaceae. The plant is native to dry, rocky and hilly areas of North, Central and South India, mostly in Deccan Peninsula and Orissa. It is indigenous plant of South Asia, but now locally cultivated and naturalizing in Sri Lanka, India, Burma (Myanmar), Bangladesh, Thailand and throughout the Malaysian region except for Borneo; also occasionally cultivated in other topical regions. It is also found in E. Asia – S. China, Vietnam, and New Guinea. Indian Spurge Tree, Oleander Spurge, Dog’s Tongue, Common Milk-hedge, Hedge Euphorbia, Oleander Leafed Euphorbia, Milkbush, Holy Milk Hedge, Hedge Euphorbia, Leafy milk spurge, Milk hedge, Milk spurge and crested oleander cactus are few of the popular common names of the plant.

Plant Description

Common milk hedge is a bitter, xerophytic, and prickly, succulent shrubby, fleshy, large, erect much branched shrub, which sometimes grows into a small tree of 2-8 meters height or more with rounded branches cactus like plant. The tree looks somewhat like a cactus but with large, persistent leaves on younger parts of the plant, and growing up to 8 meters. The plant prefers rocky areas for the growth.  They also need well drained soil and grow well in dry place and rocky area.

Stem

Stem is Green and cylindrical and large branches are round and terete with spiral ridge portion. Sharp stipular thorns have hollow space in center that consists of white reticulate mass. Younger branchlets are somewhat verticillate, with two or more whorls without articulations, fleshy, cactus-like, swirled, light-green, glabrous, 8-30 (-40) mm thick, often leafless, and spine shield in 5 distinct rows on more or less distinct angles (not winged) which are visible for a long time. The trunk and older branches are grayish and cylinder. Bunches of succulent thick leaves occurs on the branches. Central meristem is prominent throughout plasto-chronic phases. There is close histogenic relationship between central and peripheral meristem. The leaves arise from the sides of wings towards the end of the branches.

Stippular thorns

The spines are short, about 4-12 mm long arising from the ribs, grayish brown to black in color, sharp, persistent, from low conical truncate distant, spirally arranged tubercles 2-5 mm height and 2-3 cm apart.

Leaves

Plant is leafless for most part of the year, except during monsoon when fresh leaves appear.  The fresh young leaves are simple, dark green in color having leathery texture. Apex is rounded, base attenuated, margins entire, hairless, oval shaped leaves, fleshy, alternate, sub sessile, ovate, oblong or spathulate. The surface is glabrous with reticulate venation. The average leaf size is about 8–14 cm long and 4–8cm wide and 1.3 – 0.2 mm thick with pointed and acute tip and are present towards the end of the branches. Peri-clinical divisions in the third and fourth layers of peripheral meristem initiate the leaf. During vegetation period they are deciduous but in the late summer they fall.

Flowers

Both male and female flowers are found in the same bunch. Nearly 3 to 7 flowered cymes or panicles appears laterally in the axils of the upper leaves on short, rigid and forked peduncles. Flattened-globose,  1.5-2  mm  x 4-5 mm,  reddish,  prominent in  groups  of tree,  the central one is sub sessile, the lateral ones with a peduncle of 6-7 mm, cyathial glands 5 oblong, 1-3 mm broad. Corolla is absent but the involucres have two nearly round to ovate, bright red bracts 3-7 mm long. Inflorescence or the arrangement of flowers in a bunch on the plant is cyathium type (one female and several male flowers are found on a same bunch). Basically, male flowers many, bracts linear while female flowers rarely developed. Flowers and fruits occur during the month of December to May.

Fruits

Fertile flowers are followed by three chambered or 3-lobed capsules that are smooth, stigmas slightly dilated and minutely toothed with 10-12 mm in diameter.

Traditional uses and benefits of Common Milk hedge (Indian Spurge Tree)

Ayurvedic Health benefits of Common milk hedge

Other Facts

Precautions

References:

https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=502544#null

https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Euphorbia+neriifolia

http://www.narc.gov.jo/gringlobal/taxonomydetail.aspx?id=16390

http://luirig.altervista.org/schedenam/fnam.php?taxon=Euphorbia+neriifolia

https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=EUNE4

https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q9256163

http://www.efloraofgandhinagar.in/succulents/euphorbia-neriifolia

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/316430042_A_Review_on_Euphorbia_neriifolia_Plant

https://www.ayursearch.com/euphorbia-neriifolia.html

https://indiabiodiversity.org/species/show/266511

http://envis.frlht.org/plantdetails/4824757fe1a5873a6c08b45d58667bcb/8497f018ff6f6afbaa5c518f13103e6c

http://www.flowersofindia.net/catalog/slides/Indian%20Spurge%20Tree.html

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1995764517303504

https://gd.eppo.int/taxon/EPHED

http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/kew-81079

http://www.stuartxchange.org/SoroSoro

http://www.thepharmajournal.com/archives/2018/vol7issue9/PartD/7-8-62-145.pdf

https://biomedres.us/pdfs/BJSTR.MS.ID.000523.pdf

http://www.ijpacr.com/files/07-04-2017/08.pdf

http://www.globinmed.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=105908:euphorbia-neriifolia-l&catid=286&Itemid=357

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