Disclaimer : This databank is curated from literature and may not claim for any medications or directly use of plants without any prior knowledge or consultation of physician.



Botanical Name Plant's Common Name Plant Family

MT127 : Prunus persica (L.) Stokes

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Melghat's Flora's Serial No. :  
Class : Magnoliopsida - Dicotyledons
Order : Rosales
Family : Rosaceae - Rose family
Genus : Prunus L. - plum
Species : Prunus persica (L.) Batsch - peach
Plant Location in Melghat :  
Plant Category : Tree  
Plant's Current Status :  
Plant Family : ROSACEAE  

 
Plant Common Name : Peach, Adoo (Hindi), Chumbhrei (Manipuri), Pichesu (Kannada), Pishu (oriya)
 
Synonym : Amygdalus persica L.
Persica laevis DC.
Persica nucipersica Borckh.
Persica platycarpa Decne.
Persica vulgaris Mill.
Persica vulgaris subsp. laevis (DC.) Bonnier & Layens
Prunus daemonifuga H. Lév. & Vaniot
Prunus persica (L.) Batsch


Description : Trees, up to 15 m tall; bark dark grey. Leaves simple, alternate, spiral; petioles ca. 3-8 mm; lamina ca. 8-16 x 3-6 cm, narrowly lanceolate or oblong lanceolate, cuneate at base, caudate acuminate at apex, sharply serrate along margins, basal glands two. Inflorescences in axillary racemes, solitary, ca. 5-8 cm long; Flowers ca. 0.5-0.7 cm across, white; pedicels pubescent; calyx ciliate. Drupes ca. 2.3 cm long, yellow, tinged with red, ellipsoid, acid to taste. A small moderate sized deciduous tree. Leaves lanceolate. Flowers are pink and solitary. Fruit is drupe and succulant. Usually planted as ornamental, almost found as wild. Flowers bloom during January to February. Fruit ripes during May to June.
 
Curated Medicinal Use / Activity : The leaves are astringent, demulcent, diuretic, expectorant, febrifuge, laxative, parasiticide and mildly sedative. They are used internally in the treatment of gastritis, whooping cough, coughs and bronchitis. They also help to relieve vomiting and morning sickness during pregnancy, though the dose must be carefully monitored because of their diuretic action. The dried and powdered leaves have sometimes been used to help heal sores and wounds. The leaves are harvested in June and July then dried for later use. The flowers are diuretic, sedative and vermifuge. They are used internally in the treatment of constipation and oedema. A gum from the stems is alterative, astringent, demulcent and sedative. The seed is antiasthmatic, antitussive, emollient, haemolytic, laxative and sedative. It is used internally in the treatment of constipation in the elderly, coughs, asthma and menstrual disorders. The bark is demulcent, diuretic, expectorant and sedative. It is used internally in the treatment of gastritis, whooping cough, coughs and bronchitis. The root bark is used in the treatment of dropsy and jaundice. The bark is harvested from young trees in the spring and is dried for later use.
 
Plant's Phytochemicals : Flavylium perchlorate
Abscisic acid
1-Hentriacontanol
acetic acid
Afzelin
amygdalin
aromadendrin
Daucosterol
donepezil
Floribundoside
kaempferol
Multiflorin A
Multiflorin B
naringenin
Persicogenin
Prunasin
quercetin
Tacrine

Reference : ~ Prabha Y. Bhogaonkar and Pankaj A. Dhole; "Checklist of Flora of Melghat"; Chief Conservator of Forest & Field Director, Melghat Tiger Project, Camp, Amravati (2018 - 2019); Book PMID :