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ETHNOBOTANICAL AND PHYTOCHEMICAL STUDIES ON SOME MEDICINAL ARID ZONE PLANTS OF NAGAUR DISTRICT INTRODUCTION The North-Western part of the state Rajasthan is a part of Thar Desert and it lies between 2303' to 30012' North latitudes and 6903' to 78017' East longitudes. It covers an area of about 3,42,239 sq km, representing nearly 11% of total area of Indian sub continent. About 61% of the total hot arid zone of country lies in Western Rajasthan (Singh and Shankarnarayan, 1986). It spreads over 12 out of 33 districts namely Barmer, Bikaner, Churu, SriGanganagar, Hanumangarh, Jalore, Jaisalmer, Jhunjhunu, Jodhpur, Nagaur, Pali and Sikar. Physiographically, it is the eastern extension of Sahara-Thar desert covered by shifting and fixed sand deposits. This region of Rajasthan suffers periodic droughts and comprised of isolate and dreary regions which are occupied by fixed or mobile dunes. The vegetation consists of xerophytes which are stunted or prickly shrubs and perennial herbs capable of drought resistance. Many artiodactyls, insects pests and rodents are the main groups of those animals who are responsible for the destruction of plants diversity and identification of desertic conditions. In the Thar desert around 10% of the existing plant diversity is endangered. Among the flora the medicinal plants like Tumba (Citrullus colocynthis), Rohida (Tecomella undulata), Khejri (Prosopis cineraria), Babool (Acacia senegal), Kankero (Maytenus emarginata), Bordi (Ziziphus glabarata), Jal (Salvadora oleoides), Kair (Capparis decidua), Nagauri Ashwagandha (Withania somnifera), Guggal (Commiphora wightii), Bhur hingani (Solanum surattense), Andho khimp (Ephedra foliata), Urginea indica etc. are depleting and becoming endangered (Sinha, 1997). In these regions the plant diversity is subjected to intense population pressure. Trees, shrubs and even their roots are mercilessly exploited by human beings for fuel fodder, fencing, construction and medicinal use. In arid region plants are adapted to soil moisture stress, dryness of air and high atmospheric temperature. Arid zone plants show morphological adaptation that enables them to survive under lack of moisture and prolonged periods of drought. Physiography of Study Area Nagaur District is situated between 260.25” & 270.40” North Latitude & 730.10” & 750.15” East Longitude. It is situated amidst seven districts namely Bikaner, Churu, Sikar, Jaipur, Ajmer, Pali, Jodhpur. Nagaur is the fifth largest district in Rajasthan with a vast terrain spreading over 17,718 sq. K.M. Its geographical spread is a good combine of plain, hills, sand mounds & as such it is a part of the great Indian Thar Desert. Nagaur has a dry climate with a hot summer. Sand storms are common in summer. The climate of the district is conspicuous by extreme dryness, large variations of temperature & highly variable rainfall. The mercury keeps on rising intensely from March till June. These are the hottest months. The maximum temperature recorded in district is 470 C with 00 C as the lowest recorded temperature. The average temperature of the district is 23.50 C. The winter season in the extends from mid November till the beginning of March. Rainy season is of a short during from July to mid September. There are ten raingage stations, namely - Nagaur, Khinvsar, Didwana, Merta, Parbatsar, Makarana, Nawa, Jayal, Degana & Ladnun in the district. The average rainfall in the district is 36.16 cm & 51.5 percentage humidity. The district of Nagaur is poor in forest resources. The total area under including hills, is reported to be 240.92 Sq.kms., which is 1.3 percent of total geographical area of the district. Scanty rainfall & other geographical constraints account for this. The western part of the district is divided of natural vegetation cover except for low hurbs & grass which grows on low sand dunes. However, the south-eastern part of the district & part of the northern tehsil of Ladnun & Didwana have much greater greenery as compared to north-west part of the district. Khejri trees are commonly found in the district. It's leaves are used as fodder. It also gives gum. Apart from commercial value, this this tree is considered holy. The tree also plays an important role in checking soil crosion. Medicinal Plants Plants are important source of medicines. These are used by the human beings for the treatment of many diseases from ancient time. There are so many references about natural vegetation, those are used as medicines in the ‘Rigveda’ which is the India’s ancient Religious Grantha. The Indian traditional clinical method ‘Ayurveda’ is based on Chrak- Sanhita and Susruta- Sanhita that include description of about 700 medicinal plants. Medicinal plants were known to the early civilizations. As a matter of fact the history of the drug plants is as the history of these civilizations. The Chinese reported to have use of drugplants, as early as 5000 to 4000 B.C. The Assyrians, Babylonians and Egyptians knew many drug plants in about 1600 B.C. The work of Greeks viz. Aristotle (384-322 B.C.), Hippocrates (460-370 B.C.), Pythagaras and Theophratus (370-287 B.C.) have numerous references of many of the present day drugs. In 77 B.C., a Roman physician Dioscorides wrote “De Materia Medica” which described the nature and properties of all the 500 medicinal plants known at that time. His book was considered to be the most authentic work on medicinal plants for the next 16 centuries or so. There was no advancement in the knowledge of drug plants during the dark ages. After the introduction of printing in Europe in the 15th century many persons published ‘Herbals’ which contained many true and false information. Some people advanced the ‘Doctrine of Signs or Signatures’ which meant that the appearance of a plants or its organs indicated its utility, the sign being placed there by the creator. Mandrake (Mandragora officinarum) was one such plant, the human body like appearance of which led to the superstition that it was useful in the treatment of human diseases. Medicinal importance of any plant depends on some specific substances found from the plant as alkaloids, steroids, resins, glycosides, volatile oils, gums, tannins etc. These active substances are present in storage organs of plants as roots, leaves, bark, seeds etc. In the present time medicinal science has paid great attention to the study of drug plants. The branch of medicinal science which deals with the drug plants is called Pharmacognosy, where as the study of the action of the drug plants is called Pharmacology. Phytochemical Aspects At first International congress on ‘Medicinal Plant Research’ held at the University of Munich, Germany, during September, 1976, it was estimated that 6,00,000 plant species existed on the earth, and only some 5 per cent of them had been specifically investigated chemically and pharmacologically. This indicates the immense scope of research work in the field of phytochemistry. The knowledge of the chemical composition of foods is the first essential in the dietary treatment of disease or in any quantitative study of human nutrition. Both of these have become important in recent years and consequently there has been a demand for better and more up to date information about the chemistry of food. Plant body is composed primarily of carbohydrate proteins, amino acids, nucleotides, lipids and porphyrins. The plant parts used by desert dwellers has not been analysed fully from nutritive value point of view. Life can not be sustained without adequate nourishment. Man needs adequate food for growth, development and to lead an active and healthy life. Plant can manufacture the food they need from simple chemicals derived from the soil, water and carbon dioxide of the air. Higher organisms on the other hand do not possess this capacity to manufacture food from simple chemicals and hence they depend on plants or other animals for obtaining the food they need. Procuring enough food for its survival is the main aim of life’s struggle in all the higher organisms. Dietary habits of populations in different regions of the world have been determined mainly by the availability of foods locally and local practices. Man has evolved his habitual dietary pattern to maintain good health, perhaps after a good deal of trial and error. Satisfaction of hunger is usually the primary criteria for adequate food intake. But satisfaction of hunger itself is not a safe guide for the selection of proper foods. For sustaining healthy and active life, diet should be planned on sound nutritional principles. With the increasing demand for the natural drug and to fill the void in our knowledge regarding the chemistry of famine foods and plants of desert origin, there is urgent need to undertake a full scale phytochemical survey of our indigenous plant to locate the potential sources of pharmacologically active chemical compounds of alkaloid nature like tannin etc. These nutritive contents are found in all green plants. The primary productivity of the green autotrophic plants is the main base for the present existence of entire biosphere. It determines the carry capacity of earth for human beings. Great importance is being laid on the rate of energy storage in diverse ecosystem by green plants. The standing crop can be expressed in terms of biomass i.e. organism mass and it can be measured as living weight, dry weight, ash free weight and in calories etc. Primary productivity is the gain in the weight of organic matter generated by photosynthesis in a given period of time. Net production is that part of gross photosynthetic production, which is accumulated in plant after metabolic activities and hence becomes available for utilization as food. Amino acids in plants are found in the free and bound state. All amino acids are made up of C, H, O and N. However, few posses sulfur also (cystein and methionine). The general formula for amino acids is R.CH. (NH2) COOH. The group R being either a simplest hydrogen atom (as in glycine) or a complex organic group. The group R may also show neutral basic or acidic character and include a hydroxyl, aromatic or sulfur containing substituents. An amino acids may be cyclic (aromatic) non cyclic (aliphatic) or heterocyclic. Due to the presence of at least one acid or carboxylic group (-COOH) and one or more basic or amino (-NH2) group, these acids can behave as acids towards bases and a basic towards acids, thereby they are amphoteric compounds. The compounds are generally exists in two stereo isomeric form, L-forms and Dforms. The asymmetry exists at -carbon atom (except in glycine where R=H) only L-forms of amino acids are encountered in plant protein. However, the D-forms of many amino acids are found in cell wall, antibiotic peptide of many micro organism seaweeds. Ascorbic acid is a good electron donor in photosynthetic phosphorylation acid as an important regulator of oxidation-reduction state of protoplasm. All these properties shows that various metabolic compounds are useful to cattle as well as human being so we investigate the five plant species on the basis of various aspects. Chlorophylls are the most important leaf pigments capable of photosynthesis. pigment complex is also responsible for the green colouration of leaves. The Nine types of chlorophylls i.e. chlorophyll a, b, c, d, e, bacteriochlorophyll ‘a’, and ‘b’ and chlorobium chlorophylls 650 nm and 660 nm (Allen,1966) have been distinguished. Chlorophyll ‘a’ is universal since it is found in all the autotrophic organisms excepting the photosynthetic bacteria; chlorphyll ‘b’ is another important chlorophyll present in association with chlorophyll ‘a’ in all the autotrophic higher plants and algal members of chlorophyta. The chlorophyll ‘c’, ‘d’ and ‘e’ are restricted in distribution to certain divisions of algae. Bacterio chlorophyll and chlorobium chlorophylls have been isolated from photosynthetic bacteria. In the leaves of green plants, the ratio of chlorophyll ‘a’ and ‘b’ is usually (but not invariably) near about 2:1. Chlorophyll ‘a’ is normally blue green while chlorophyll ‘b’ is yellow green. Besides, there are also other light absorbing pigments associated with chlorophyll ‘a’ and ‘b’. These are often called accessory photosynthetic pigments and are not green in colour. Carotenoids are such pigments. chlorophylls. Quantitatively they are usually one third as compared to Two groups of carotenoids are known in plants. Hydrogen carotenoids or carotenes and oxygen carotenoids or xanthophylls. They range in colour from purple to yellow. Both chlorophyll ‘a’ and ‘b’ are optically active and laevorotatory but show differences in molecular structure, absorption spectra and solubility. Chlorophyll ‘a’ is highly soluble in petroleum ether while chlorophyll ‘b’ in methyl alcohol. Both shows an absorption maximum in the blue violet region with peaks at about 429 and 453 nm and with minor peaks at 410 and 430 nm, respectively for ‘a’ and ‘b’. In addition they have a secondary absorption maximum in the red region with peaks at about 600 nm and 642 nm. In addition to primary metabolites (amino acid, sugar) common to all life forms, some reactions lead to the formation of compounds unique to a few species as even to a single cultivar. These reactions are classified under the “Secondary Metabolites” and their products so produced are called secondary metabolites. Secondary metabolites are those substances whose structure and metabolic interactions within the cell are apparently different from those involved with the primary growth metabolism. These substances includes Alkaloids, Antibiotics, Cardiac glycosides, Coumarins, Lignins, Resins, Sterols, Sapogenins, Tannins, Volatile oil, Insecticidesetc. Secondary products are produced from primary products and play an important role in different metabolic activities of living organisms. In addition to their economic importance, many secondary metabolites play ecological and physiological role in higher plants. Investigations in the area of biochemical ecology indicate that some secondary compounds produced by plants are important either to protect these plants against microorganisms and animals or to enhance to ability of one plant species to complete with other plants in a particular habitat. Higher plants produce a great variety of secondary products which play a minor role in the basic life processes of the plant but often have an ecological role, such as attractant of pollinators and chemical defense against micro-organisms, insects and higher predators. Many of these natural products have been used as sources of large number of industrial products, including agricultural chemicals, pharmaceuticals and food additives. Although, some of the natural products have been replaced by synthetic substitutes because of cost considerations, a number of commercially important high value chemicals are still being extracted from plants. Many of the substances used in the pharmaceuticals, food, flavor and perfume industry originate from plants and the trend over last fifty years have been towards chemical synthesis but still the plants remain an important source of a lot of these compounds. Many compounds are still difficult or costly to synthesize. Moreover, the increasing consumer preference for natural food colours and flavours over their synthetic counter parts further increases our dependence on plants. Some of the plants are rich in secondary metabolites which are potential source of drug and essential oils. Biosynthesis of metabolites although controlled genetically is affected strongly by environmental influence. As a result there are fluctuation in the concentration and quantities of secondary metabolites such as flavonoids, phytosterols, steroidal sapogenins, pyrethrins etc. UNESCO (1960) has published a survey report with details of the old world medicinal plants growing in different arid zones belonging to different families which are most adapted to dry conditions for their growth and production of secondary metabolites in plants under limited water supply points to the possibility of involvement of these compounds in the adaptability to drought conditions. Much more research under controlled condition is required in this area. The secondary metabolites have high economical and pharmaceutical importance and the industries are deeply interested in large variety of chemical substances being produced by plants due to their lesser toxicity. Though these substances are generally extracted from plant parts. A number of plants have been screened for their antimicrobial activity. The antimicrobial activity of leaves and flowers of Palicaria crispa, Sonchus asper and Xanthium strumarium against selective micro organisms such as Staphylococcus aureus (Gram positive), Escherichia coli (Gram negative) and a fungal pathogen Candida albicans. Flavonoids are series of related water soluble phenolic glycosides having in common a basic structural unit the C15 skelton of flavone or co-ester of 4- hydroxycinamic acid. They occur universally in higher plants but are uncommon in cryptogams. They impart colour of flowers and fruits and co-relation between flower colour and attraction of insects for pollination is well known. They also provide resistance to plants. Some of the flavonoids are of pathological significance whereas others are physiologically importance to animals. Beside providing pigments and colour, these are also used for their therapeutic properties, treating haemorrhagic conditions and protection against nuclear hazards. Present study, thus aims to ethanobotanical and phytochemical studies of selected arid zone plants from Nagour district. IMPORTANCE OF PROPOSED RESEARCH INVESTIGATION Plants are important source of medicines. These are used by human beings from ancient times. Primitive people have always used many different kinds of plants as cure for various ailments. Numerous drugs of plant origin have been found to be useful in the treatment of various disorders. Their use has contributed greatly to a lengthening of the average human life span. Plants, in the past, have played an important role in human nutrition and in providing other necessities of life. Today, they are equally important and will, no doubt, remain intimately connected with our life in the times to come. Keeping in view the importance of medicinal plants of this semi arid region (Nagaur district) fifteen plants of high medicinal value have been selected for ethnomedicinal studies. These plants not only have the great medicinal value but also are very rich in nutritional value. Hence, the study of these plants regarding their distribution, nutritive value and also the presence of some other economically important metabolites is very essential