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Local Plants and Animals

A Comprehensive Guide to Śrī Vṛndāvana Dhāma

Queen of Flowers
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Queen of Flowers


Table of contents

Overview

The Mathura-Vrindavana area contains a wide variety of plant and animal life. Some species include; peacocks, variety of monkeys, parrots, donkeys, spotted deer, lotus and jasmine flowers, exotic kadamba and tamal trees. Find out more about them here!

Flora

Lotus

Flowering Season||March to May
Lotus
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Lotus
Scientific NameNelumbo nucifera
FamilyNymphaeaceae
ColourWhite, Pink
Common namesChinese Arrowroot Lotus


Lotus, known as flower of purity is the National Flower of India. This water plant is very easy to grow. Flowers in pink and white, have a large number of petals and large circular thick leaves. The leaves are sometimes, and the flowers always, raised above the water surface. This beautiful and fragrant flower blooms only for one day.

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Jasmine
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Jasmine
Scientific NameJasminum Officinale
FamilyOleaceae
ColourWhite
Best SeasonApril to September
Common namesPoets Jasmine

Jasmine or Jessamine, the sweet -scented white flowers belongs to the genus Jasminum. It is an evergreen semi-vining shrub native to tropical areas of southeast Asia, Africa and Australia. This seasonal plant contains about 150 species. Flowers are about 1 inch and plant height is about 6 or 8 feet or 10 to 15 feet if grown as a vine. The oval rich green leaves have five to nine leaflets, each up to 2½ inches long.

Grown all over the world for its fragrance, Jasmine flowers are used to flavour jasmine tea and other herbal or black teas. The flower oil extracted from the two species Jasminum Officinale and Grandiflorum is used in high-grade perfumes and cosmetics, such as creams, oils, soaps, and shampoos. In Asia, flowers are stringed together to make garlands. The flowers of one of the double varieties are held sacred to Lord Vishnu and are used as votive offerings in religious ceremonies. Several types of jasmine are used as ornamental plants.


Saracaindica Ashoka
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Saracaindica Ashoka
Indian NameAshoka
Botanical NameSaraca indica
Other NamesAshoka, Anganapriya


Saraca Indica is grown all over India. It occur upto the altitudes 600 metres. It is cultivated in many gardens because of its decorative orange red flowers and evergreen beautiful foliage. Its use in treatment of excessive uterine bleeding is extensive in India. The plant is used also in dysmenorrhoea and for depression in women.

Origin

Ashoka can be grown in states like Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka, Maharashtra, and A.P.

Chemical composition and key active constituents

The bark contains tannin, catechol, sterol and organic calcium compounds. Its methanol fraction contains haematoxylene, tannin,and water-soluble glycoside. The latter has glucose,galactose and mannose as sugars.


Gunja
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Gunja
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Fauna


Blue Peafowl (Pave cristatus) - Mor - National bird of India.

Blue Peacock, or Peafowl, are beautiful birds that are native to India, Nepal and Sri Lanka. In Haryana, they are found almost in all villages and orchards. The male peafowl is called a peacock; the female is called a peahen. In the wild, they live in deciduous tropical rainforests. These magnificent birds do not migrate. A group of peafowl is called an ostentation or a muster. A peacock, dancing in full plumage, is surely among the most beautiful birds in the world. The male peacock in the spring constantly utters its melodious call which can be heard for a long distance. The Peacock is said to come out and dance on seeing clouds and rain. Because of their wonderful appearance, the peacock has long been famous outside of its native country India. Phoenicians brought peacocks to Egypt more than 3000 years ago.


Habitat: All habitats, particularly wooded areas near villages. This bird is a very common breeding resident in Haryana. Local names: Mayur, Mor

Size: The male peafowl, peacock, is about 2 m long. The female, peahen, is about 0.90 m long. Both have a fan-shaped crest on the head. The peacock has a long, brilliantly-colored train of feathers that grow from its shimmering blue back. He can raise the train of feathers, forming a stunning display. The peahen does not have a train; her plumage is brown, white, and black.

Diet: Peafowl eat seeds, grain, fruit, other plant material, and some small animals, like mice, insects and snakes.

Nest & Eggs: Shallow nests made of sticks, leaves, and grass. Nests are usually located in the undergrowth of the forest.

Breeding: Peahens are excellent mothers, but peachicks can be reared just as well with chicken foster mothers or in brooders. They are among the easiest birds to raise. The only precaution to be taken is to give them good shelters in the autumn and winter following their birth, as they are not fully grown before eight or ten months.

Variety: The Indian Peacock has produced several mutations in captivity. These include the Black-shouldered, in which the male has the wings blue, green and black, the female being very pale; the White; and the Pied, in which the normal plumage of the Indian Blue is irregularly marked with white. The so-called 'Spalding' variety is a hybrid between the Indian and the Green species. It is very beautiful bird, intermediate between the two parents in colors, in hardiness and in temperament.

Keeping as Pets: The Indian peafowl, often called Blue peafowl, is hardy and more commonly kept. The Indian Blues do all right in cold climates and are even quite sociable. The Indian Blue Peafowl can live and breed in parks and gardens without any serious fighting. If a yard or a garden is small, they may cause damage to plants by eating leaves and flowers, but if allowed a good deal of room, their destruction is insignificant. Pinioned peacocks will manage to get on trees and walls and over fences, and it is not too easy to confine them. But they almost never stray from home once they have settled down. They can of course also be kept in covered pens, and they live and breed well in them. But they must be given enough room.


Demoiselle Crane
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Demoiselle Crane


Monkeys at Kaliya-ghata
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Monkeys at Kaliya-ghata


Papiha Cuckoo Hawk
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Papiha Cuckoo Hawk

Sub-pages

There are 1 sub-pages.

  1. Animals

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This page has been accessed 1691 times. This page was last modified 20:45, 17 Jan 2005.