Site icon Health Benefits

Gamhar facts and benefits

Gamhar facts and benefits

Gamhar Quick Facts
Name: Gamhar
Scientific Name: Gmelina arborea
Origin Tropical moist forest from India, Burma, Bhutan, Pakistan, Thailand and Sri Lanka to southern China
Colors Dark green, turning yellow when ripe
Shapes Smooth, ovate or pyriform, 2–2.5 cm long, smooth, large drupe, fleshy, glabrous
Taste Bittersweet taste
Gmelina arborea, commonly known as beechwood, gmelina, goomar teak, Kashmir tree, Malay beechwood, white teak, yemane and locally known as gamhar, is actually a fast-growing deciduous tree, growing naturally throughout greater part of India at altitudes up to 1,500 meters. Apart from that it also occurs naturally in Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, and in southern provinces of China, and has been grown extensively in Sierra Leone, Nigeria, Malaysia, and on experimental basis in other countries as well. It is normally planted in gardens and roads. Since it is a medicinal tree and its roots, stem, stem bark, fruits, leaves, flowers all are used for medicinal purpose in India since ancient times. Its mention is found in all classical texts of Ayurveda.

Gamhar is a Southeast Asian tree that produces high-quality wood which is pale yellow to cream-colored or pinkish-buff when fresh, turning yellowish brown on exposure and is soft to moderately hard, light to moderately heavy, lustrous when fresh, usually straight to irregular or rarely wavy grained and medium course textured, The wood is used to make furniture, boats and musical instruments, such as Indian sitars and drums. It is also popular as firewood in part because of slow burning. Apart from that its leaves, bark, and roots are often used in tonics and tinctures to cure a wide variety of ailments, and the fruit consists of very high concentrations of helpful antioxidants. This plant has a lot of significance to traditional Indian Ayurvedic medicine, and is respected by many Eastern health practitioners as a broad remedy for moderate pain and inflammation.

Plant

Gamhar is a fast-growing deciduous tree about 12–30 m high and 60–100 cm in diameter.  The plant is found growing in tropical semi-evergreen, moist and dry deciduous forest and prefers moist, fertile soil having good drainage and does not thrive on ill-drained soils and remains underdeveloped on dry, sandy or poor soils. Bark is light gray or gray-yellow, smooth, thin, somewhat corking, becoming brown and rough; twigs stout, often slightly 4-angled.

Root

Root is cylindrical with uneven surface, greyish brown, and fracture somewhat tough in bark, brittle and predominant in woody portion. Fresh mature root bark is yellowish in color. Dry pieces are curved and channeled, thinner ones forming single quills, external surface rugged due to presence of vertical cracks, ridges, fissures and numerous lenticels, fracture short and granular.

Leaves

Leaves are 4-8 inch long, broadly ovate, acuminate, entire ; upper surface glabrous when mature, lower persistently clothed with fulvous stellate hairs, base cordate or truncate and shortly cuncate; petioles 2-3 inch long, cylindric, puberulous, glandular at the top.

Flowers

Flowers are bisexual, trumpet-shaped, hairy and short-stalked, having reddish to yellow color; resemble to those of vasa flowers. Flowering normally takes place from February to April.

Fruit

Fruit is smooth, ovate or pyriform, 2–2.5 cm long, smooth, large drupe, fleshy and glabrous sometimes with portion of attached pedicel, two seeded, sometimes one seeded. It is dark green when young turning yellow when ripe.

Seed

Seed is Ovate, 0.5-1 cm long, 0.4-0.6 cm wide, light yellow, and surface smooth, seed coat thin, papery.

Practical Uses of Gmelina Arborea

Ayurvedic benefits of Gmelina Arborea

Different Products from different parts of the plant

Food: The fruit of G. arborea is edible.

Fodder: Leaves are regarded as good fodder and cattle eat the fruit.

Fuel: G. arborea is planted mostly for firewood, which has a calorific value of 4800 kcal/kg. For firewood, a spacing of 2 x 2 m is recommended. Plantations of G. arborea have been established for tobacco curing.

Apiculture: Flowers produce plentiful nectar, which produces high-quality honey.

Fiber: The wood produces good-quality pulp. Unmixed semi-chemical pulp is suitable only for carton board or low-grade writing paper, but kraft pulp of yemane wood is suitable for higher grades of writing paper. It is also utilized for particle board.

Timber: When first cut, the wood is yellowish- to reddish-white, turning light russet or yellowish-brown with a density of 400-560 kg/cubic m. The wood seasons well without degrading, but it is slow to dry both in the open and in a kiln. Where it is indigenous, it is regarded as a valuable general-purpose wood because of its dimensional stability. The natural durability of the wood is about 15 years. Uses include the manufacture of furniture, plywood core stock, mine props, matches and timber for light construction.

Tannin or dyestuff: Both wood ash and fruit yield a very persistent yellow dye.

Medicine: Bark, leaves and roots contain traces of alkaloids and are used medicinally in its native range.

Hindu medicine: Both fruit and bark have medicinal properties against bilious fever.

Other products: Recommended for silkworm culture.

Other Facts

Gmelina arborea Facts

Gmelina arborea Roxb is one of the important medicinal plants most widely propagated and cultivated species of the family Verbenaceae. It is commonly known as “Kashmarya” and one of the herbs mentioned in all ancient scriptures of Ayurveda. It is a beautiful fast growing avenue tree that grows throughout India. This medicinal plant is highly valued from time immemorial because of its vast medicinal properties. It is extensively used traditionally as anti-helmintic, antimicrobial, anti-diabetic, diuretic, and hepato-protective and antiepileptic agent.

Name Gamhar
Scientific Name Gmelina arborea
Native Tropical moist forest from India, Burma, Bhutan, Pakistan, Thailand and Sri Lanka to southern China
Common Names Beechwood, gmelina, goomar teak, Kashmir tree, Malay beechwood, white teak, yeman, Kashmari, Kashmarya, Kasmari, Bhadraparni, Gambhari, Candahar tree, Coomb tree, Cashmeri teak, Coomb Teak
Name in Other Languages Assamese: Gomari, Gamari
English: Malay bush-beech, gmelina, gumhar, Candahar tree, Cashmeri teak, Coomb Teak, Gamari, Gumbar, Kambari, Kumil, White Kashmir Teak, White Teak, white beech
Bengali: Gāmāra (গামার), Gamar, Gambhari(গাম্ভারি), gambar, gumbar, Gumar
Burmese: Mai saw,yemari,yemane,yemani
Chinese: Yúnnán shí zǐ (云南石梓), Diān shí zǐ(滇石梓), Suān shù (酸树)
Finnish: Intianjemane
French: Gmélin arbore
Fijian: Yemane
Germany: Gumar-Teak
Gujarati: શેવન Shevan, Shewan, Shivan
Hindi: Gumbar(गमहर), Gamhar (गम्हड़), Bhadraparni (भद्रपर्णी), khamara, khumbhari, sewan, Gamari, Gambari, Gambhar, Gumbhar, Kambar, Kambhar, Khambhari, Khammara, Kumar, Kumbhar, Sewan, Shewan, Shiwan
Indonesian: Gumhar
Kannada: Shivani, Kaashmiri Mara (ಕಾಶ್ಮೀರಿ ಮರ), Śivanimara (ಶಿವನಿಮರ) Shivanimara, kooli mara, Shivane mara, kumbuda, kumulu, Shivanigida, Shivani, Kashmiri, Shivanimara, Shivane, Kumbala mara, Shewney, kuli
Kasmiri: Mara, shivani
Malayalam: Kumalu, Kumbil, Kumizhanpazham, Kumizhu, Sevana, Kumil (കുമിഴ്) Kumizh, kumpiḷ (കുമ്പിള്‍)
Marathi: Thōraśivaṇī (थोरशिवणी), Shivan (शिवण), siwan
Manipuri: Wang (ৱাং)
Meghalaya (Garo): Gamari, Gambare
Nepali: Khamaari
Oriya: Bhodropornni, Butalo, Thlanvawng, gambhari, kumar,ଗମ୍ଭାରୀ
Portuguese: Guemelina, Guimelina, Árvore-boca-de-leão
Punjabi: gumhar, kumhar
Sanskrit: Gambhari (गम्भारी), Sindhuparni (सिन्धुपर्णी), Sindhuveshanam(सिन्धुवेषणम्), Stulatvacha(स्तूलत्वचा), Kashmari, Kashmari, Kashmarya, Kasmari, Bhadraparni, Katphalah, Sarvato-Bhadra, Shri-parni, Krishnavrintaka, Kambari
Sinhala: Demata (දෙමට)
Spanish: Melina, gmelina
Tamil: Gumadi, Kumalaa, Kumalaa maram, Umi, Kumutai (குமுதை), Kumpal(கூம்பல்), Peru-n-kumil(பெருங்குமிழ்)
Telugu: Pedda Gumudu Teku(పెద్ద గుముడు టేకు), summadi, Peggummudu, Peggummadi, Gumudu, Pedda-gumudu, Gumar-tek, pedda-gomru, tagumuda
Thai: Ŝx (ซ้อ)
Wolof: Melinoo
Lepcha: Numbor
Garo: Bolkobak
Plant Growth Habit Fast-growing deciduous tree
Growing Climate Found growing in Tropical semi-evergreen, moist and dry deciduous forest.
Soil Prefers moist, fertile soil having good drainage.and does not thrive on ill-drained soils and remains stunted on dry, sandy or poor soils
Plant Size About 12–30 m high and 60–100 cm in diameter
Bark Light gray or gray-yellow, smooth, thin, somewhat corking, becoming brown and rough;
Leaf Simple, opposite and heart shaped tapering towards the apex with length of 10-25 cm and breadth of 8-20 cm and have waxy bloom on the underside
Flower Bisexual, trumpet-shaped, hairy and short-stalked, having reddish to yellow color; resemble to those of vasa flowers.
Flowering Season February to April
Fruit Shape & Size Smooth, ovate or pyriform, 2–2.5 cm long, smooth, large drupe, fleshy, glabrous
Fruit Color Dark green, turning yellow when ripe
Flavor/Aroma Fruity smell
Taste Bittersweet taste
Seed 2-4, oblong
Plant Parts Used Root, bark, fruit, flower, leaves
Season May onwards up to June
Traditional Medicinal Uses
  • The roots are used in the treatment of gonorrhoea, Cough, rheumatism and foetid ulcers.
  • It is also used in Catarrh of the bladder.
  • Root and bark of Gmelina arborea are claimed to be stomachic, galactagogue laxative and anthelmintic; improve appetite, useful in hallucination, piles, abdominal pains, burning sensations, fevers, ‘tridosha’ and urinary discharge.
  • A paste of the leaves has been applied to treat headaches associated with fever.
  • Juice is used as wash for ulcers.
  • Flowers are useful in leprosy and blood diseases.
  • Plant is recommended in combination with other drugs for the treatment of snakebite and scorpion sting.
  • In snakebite a decoction of the root and bark is given internally.
  • Root decoction is used in folk remedies for abdominal tumors in India.
  • Juice of young leaves has been used to treat gonorrhea and as a cough medicine.
  • The root has been used to treat epilepsy, fever and indigestion.
  • Bittersweet fruit has been included in cooling decoctions given for fevers.
  • Fruits are recommended in excessive thirst, dysuria, sexual debility in males and habitual abortion.
  • Roots alleviate flatulence, augment the appetite and are salutary in piles, being mild laxative.
  • Cold infusion of candana, ustra, gambhari works well with sugar, to alleviate the thirst.
  • For hyperacidity, the gambhari leaves, apamarga roots and the bark-skin of salmali are mashed with cow’s milk and are given orally.
  • In dysuria, the decoction of its roots is caring.
  • Leaves juice, milk and sugar are recommended in inflammatory conditions of urinary bladder and dysuria.
  • Oils extracted from the leaves and shoots may be also applied to the body as a massage oil to relieve fevers.
  • Juice pressed from the leaves is usually mixed with milk and sugar and consumed to help treat inflammation of the bladder or urinary tract
  • Roots are also thought to treat flatulence and increase appetite.
  • Roots are mentioned as a reliever of menstrual irregularities and are occasionally also used as a means of increasing milk supply in breastfeeding mothers.
Culinary Uses
  • The flowers are mixed with rice to make a delicious cake-like festive dish that is eaten on the traditional New Year.
Other Facts
  • It is also used in artificial limbs, carriages and bobbins.
  • Gmelina arborea leaves are considered good for cattle and are also used as a feed to eri-silkworm.
  • In Gambia there are dual purpose plantings, for firewood and for honey.
  • It is often planted as an ornamental avenue shade tree.
  • The wood makes a fairly good charcoal.
  • Both wood ash and fruit yield a very persistent yellow dye.

 

 

References:

http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/kew-91180

http://www.gbif.org/species/112257029/synonyms

http://www.gbif.org/species/5341167/vernaculars

http://eol.org/pages/590507/names/common_names

https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=565214#null

http://www.hear.org/pier/species/gmelina_arborea.htm

https://npgsweb.ars-grin.gov/gringlobal/taxonomydetail.aspx?id=17827

http://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/177283/

http://herbs.indianmedicinalplants.info/index.php/sanskrit-names-of-plants/44-2012-02-24-07-34-36/443-gmelina-arborea-174

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gmelina_arborea

https://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/duke_energy/Gmelina_arborea.html

http://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:77159191-1

http://www.planetayurveda.com/library/gambhari-gmelina-arborea

http://tropical.theferns.info/viewtropical.php?id=Gmelina+arborea

http://www.worldagroforestry.org/treedb/AFTPDFS/Gmelina_arborea.PDF

https://www.bimbima.com/herbs/gmelina-arborea/2960/

http://www.phytojournal.com/archives/2015/vol4issue2/PartB/4-2-38.1.pdf

70%
70%
Awesome

Comments

comments

Exit mobile version