Floristic and Phytoclimatic Study of an Indigenous Small Scale Natural Landscape Vegetation of Jhargram District, West Bengal, India

Authors

  • U.K. Sen Ecology and Taxonomy Laboratory, Department of Botany and Forestry, Vidyasagar University, West Bengal, India
  • R.K. Bhakat Ecology and Taxonomy Laboratory, Department of Botany and Forestry, Vidyasagar University, West Bengal, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31357/jtfe.v10i1.4686

Abstract

Sacred groves are distinctive examples of biotic components as genetic resources being preserved in situ and serve as secure heavens for many endangered and endemic taxa. From this point of view, the biological spectrum, leaf spectrum and conservation status of the current sacred grove vegetation, SBT (Swarga Bauri Than) in Jhargram district of West Bengal, India, have been studied. The area's floristic study revealed that SBT’s angiosperms were varied and consisted of 307 species belonging to 249 genera, distributed under 79 families of 36 orders as per APG IV. Fabales (12.05%) and Fabaceae (11.73%) are the dominant order and family in terms of species wealth. Biological spectrum indicates that the region enjoys “thero-chamae-cryptophytic” type of phytoclimate. With respect to the spectrum of the leaf size, mesophyll (14.05%) was found to be high followed by notophyll (7.84%), microphyll (7.19%), macrophyll (7.84%), nanophyll (6.86%), leptophyll (6.21%), and megaphyll (2.29%). The study area, being a sacred grove, it has a comparatively undisturbed status, and the protection of germplasm in the grove is based on traditional belief in the social system.

Downloads

Published

2020-08-21

How to Cite

Sen, U., & Bhakat, R. (2020). Floristic and Phytoclimatic Study of an Indigenous Small Scale Natural Landscape Vegetation of Jhargram District, West Bengal, India. Journal of Tropical Forestry and Environment, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.31357/jtfe.v10i1.4686

Issue

Section

Articles