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In India, the plant is common in the compounds of temples and is known as madar in Hindi: मदार. Its leaf (Marathi: rui) is one of the five leaves used in the Panch Pallava, a ritual assortment of five different leaves used as a totem by the Maratha culture in India. [9]
The milky sap of Calotropis plants is a toxic substance that can cause irritation when it comes into contact with the skin or eyes. [5] [6] The sap can be collected from various parts of the plant, including the flowers, stem, and leaves. [7]
It is a summer crop, and the hotter the place, the sourer the leaf gets. Sold on a street in Andhra Pradesh. Gongura is popular in the state of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Manipur, Tripura and also Mizoram. A baby gongura leaf is a full leaf. As the leaf grows older, the leaf splits into four or more parts. Drying gongura for pickle
A small plant of stabragh in Ab Pakhsh Seeds. Calotropis procera is a species of flowering plant in the family Apocynaceae that is native to Northern and Tropical Africa, Western Asia, South Asia and Indochina (mainland Southeast Asia).
Chart illustrating leaf morphology terms. The following terms are used to describe leaf morphology in the description and taxonomy of plants. Leaves may be simple (that is, the leaf blade or 'lamina' is undivided) or compound (that is, the leaf blade is divided into two or more leaflets). [1]
Madar may refer to: Places. Madar Junction, train station in Ajmer, Rajasthan, India; Madar, Nepal; Madar, Yemen; Madar, Hungarian name for Modrany, village in southern Slovakia; Entertainment. Madar an album by Norwegian saxophonist Jan Garbarek and Tunisian oud player Anouar Brahem; Mother, a 1951 Iranian film
A crisp roasted and carved turkey meal ($40 for two people, $75 for four, $140 for eight) and a Maple Leaf Farms duck meal ($60 for two, $110 for four, $200 for eight) include salted rye rolls ...
The fully grown tree has a rounded crown, and commonly measures 7–12 metres (20–40 feet) tall, exceptionally 45 m (150 ft). [7]The leaves are up to 50 centimetres (20 inches) long, alternate, long-petioled, two or three times compound (odd-pinnate); the leaflets are dark green above and lighter green below, with serrate margins.