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Definition A flower is a compressed modified fertile shoot, carrying modified leaves, highly specialized for the reproductive function and adapted to produce fruits and seeds, A typical flower is usually formed of four sets of floral leaves arranged on a shortened axis (flower-stalk or pedicel), the swollen or expanded apex of which is called receptacle. The floral leaves are in the following sequence from the periphery to the center 1. The calyx: composed of sepals. 2. The corolla: composed of petals. When the petals and sepals are all alike called perianth. 1. The andrœcium (male organ): composed of stamens (anthers and filaments). 2. The gynæcium (pistil, female organ): composed of carpels (ovary, style and stigma). Accessory leafy structures Bract Bracteole Involucre Involucel Bracteole Bract Involucre The flower may be accompanied by accessory leafy structures: 1- Bract: is a leafy structure from its axil arises a flower, the flower is described as Bracteate 2- Bracteole is a scale-like leaf found on the floral stalk.The flower is described as Bracteolate. • But when bracts and bracteoles are absent, the flower is described as: a- Ebracteate, e.g. Cruciferae. b- Ebracteolate, e.g. Foeniculum. 3- Involucre: is a group of bracts arranged in a One or more whorls just below the flower, e.g. Nigela,or a group of flowers e. g.Asterceae. 4- Involucel: is a group of bracteoles arranged in whorls on the floral axis as in Apiaceae. Kinds (types) of Flowers 1- arrangement of the floral leaves on the flower axis Cyclic flowers Acyclic flowers Hemicyclic flowers According to the arrangement of the floral leaves on the flower axis 1. Cyclic flowers: The floral leaves of each whorl alternate with those of the next, e.g. clove. 2. Acyclic flowers: The floral leaves are spirally arranged, e.g. Cactus. 3. Hemicyclic flowers: The sepals and petals are in whorls while stamens and carpels are arranged spirally, e.g. Ranunculus. In Chenopodiaceae, the perianth is spirally arranged, while stamens and carpels are in whorls. Cyclic: The floral leaves of each whorl alternate with those of the next, e.g. clove. Acyclic: The floral leaves are spirally arranged, e.g. Cactus. 2- According to the number of whorls present four whorls Tetracyclic Five whorls Pentacyclic two (rare) Cruciferae Di merous 3- According to the number of segments in each whorl three Monocots. Tri merous Five (most) Dicots. Penta merous Dimerous Trimerous Pentamerous 4- According to the presence of all floral parts - Complete incomplete 5- According to the symmetry of all floral leaves Regular or Actinomorphic () Irregular Asymmetric Zygomorphic (%) Asymmetric 1. Regular or. actinomorphic (): When the segments in each whorl are alike, regularly arranged and the flower can be divided by a number of radial longitudinal cuts into equal halves, e.g. Rosa and Cloves. 2. Irregular: When the numbers of one or more whorls are not alike. In such case, the flower may be: A- Asymmetric: When all the segments are irregularly arranged and not alike, thus the flower cannot be divided into equal halves, e.g. Cactus. B- Zygomorphic (%): When it can be divided only in one plane into equal halves. When the plane is median one, the flower is described as median zygomorphic and if it is lateral or a transverse one, it is lateral or transversely zygomorphic. 6- According to presence or absence of sexual organs 6t Eugenia Hermaphrodite bisexual ( ) Marginal florets of Sunflower. Ray florets of Sunflower. sterile or Neutral flowers Unisexual, imperfect Unisexual, imperfect Staminate Pistillate 1- Monoecious (= one houses) ex.Zea. 2- Dioecious (= two houses) ex. Palm and Cannabis 3- Polygamous ex.Veratrum PERIANTH • Perianth is the term given to the outer non-essential floral parts when they are not differentiated into calyx and corolla i.e., when the segments are all alike in colour, texture, etc. as in many Monocots. • The perianth may be described as: • Petaloid perianth: if brightly coloured. • Sepaloid perianth: if thin membranous and greenish. CALYX • The calyx is the outer • The function of the most whorl of the floral calyx is to protect the series. It is formed of 2essential organs of the 5 rarely numerous green flower, especially in the sepals. bud. The calyx may be: • Petaloid: with brightly • Polysepalous or coloured sepals, aposepalous: with free assuming the form sepals as in Cruciferae. and function of petals. • Gamosepalous or synsepalous: with united sepals as in Solanaceae. The sepals may be: Foliaceous:large(Rosaceae) very small (Umbelliferae) Membranous: very small structure (Insect flower). Pappus: rudimentary in a Form of bristly hairs (Arnica). Absent: is totally wanting (Chamomile). Forms of Calyx Tubular Campanulate Cup-shape Gamo sepalous Bilabiate Globose Urceolate Epicalyx Rosaceae sepals are stipulate and stipules fuse in pairs between the sepals producing an outer series of small sepal-like Malvaceae Aggregation of Bracts& bracteoles beneath the calyx COROLLA The corolla is the inner whorl of the floral envelop. The function is: 1- Attract the pollen carrying insects. 2- Protect to certain extent the essential organs of the flower. The corolla consists of delicate petals: 1. Commonly arranged in single whorl (Solanaceae). 2. Rarely double whorls (Papaver). 3. Very rarely they are spirally arranged (Cactus). The petals may be: Poly- or apopetalous: with free petals, (Rosaceae). Gamo- or symPetalous united by margins with free apical lobes, (Solanaceae). Petals are commonly brightly coloured but Lauraceae Greenish in colour, sepaloid, Chenopodum absent through abortion, apetalous, Aconitum modified into nectary Disc Colour of Petals The petals are usually brightly coloured, this colour may be due to the presence of: • - Anthocyanins (red, blue and violet according to the change in pH of the cell-sap). • - Flavone derivatives (yellow colour). • - Pigments such as carotene, xanthophyll (yellow, orange and red colours). • The white colour is due to reflection of light from the intercellular spaces of the mesophyll but not to pigments. ANDRŒCIUM • The andrœcium is the male sexual organ. • It may consist of one, two or more (counting) of stamens. • Sometimes the stamens are numerous and spirally arranged. • They are situated within or above the corolla. The complete stamen (microsporophyll) consists of: A- The filament: Corresponds to the leaf-stalk and bearing special swollen pollen-producing structure, called anther. b- The anther: Corresponds to the blade which is much reduced. The anther is divided into two anther-lobes by a structure called connective which lies on the back of the anther and corresponds to the midrib of the leaf. Each anther-lobe typically possesses two pollen-sacs containing numerous pollen-grains (microspores). The filament equal Absent anther sessile, e.g. Viola. unequal most commonly of equal length Didynamous Labiatae2L&2 Tetra dynamous 4 L& 2 sh Cruciferae The stamen • The stamen may be esterile i.e., not producing pollen and thus called staminode as in Linum, Number of Stamens • When the stamens in the flower are few i.e. definite. . When very numerous and not readily counted, they are indefinite (eg. Rose). Definite Belladonna Pentandrous Euphorbia. Mon androus # of stamens Salix Di androus Iris Tetr androus Labiatae(2+2) Tri androus Cohesion of Stamens The terms denoting the way of fusion of the stamens together are: • Monadelphous: When filaments are fused in one group, e.g. Malvaceae. • Diadelphous: When the filaments are fused in two groups, e.g. Glycyrrhiza. • Tetradelphous: When the filaments are fused in four groups, e.g. Clove. • Polyadelphous: When the filaments are fused in several groups, e.g. Citrus. • Syngenesious: When the filaments are free but the anthers cohere, e.g. Compositae (Asteraceae). Adhesion or adnation of Stamens with other floral parts 1. Episepalous adhesion between the stamens and sepals. 2. Epipetalous: adhesion between stamens and petals, e.g. Solanaceae, Asteraceae. 3. Gynandrous The stamens adhere to the gynaecium. Attachment of The Anther to the filament 1. 2. 3. 4. Innate or basifixed: When the anther is attached by its base to the apex of the filament, e.g. Datura Adnate: When the connective is well marked and the filament seems to run up the back of the anther, Dorsifixed: When the anther is attached by the back to the filament and is immovable, e.g. Cruciferae. Versatile: When the anther is attached to the filament by the middle of the back in such away turn freely in any direction , e.g. Gramineae. Structure of the anther lobe The wall of the anther-lobe consists of: 1-epidermis (exothecium) with occasional stomata and trichomes. 2-Hypodermis (endothecium) consists of large parenchyma cells which become thickened mostly with spiral bands appear in side view as lignified bars and this is known as fibrous layer. 3- A nutritive layer (tapetum) to the inner side. Pollen The pollen constitutes the fine powder that is liberated on the dehiscence of the anther The pollen (microspores) grains are minute, varying in shape , size but mostly constant for each species. Structure of the Pollen Grains • Each pollen grain possesses a wall of two layers or membranes, The outer layer of the wall (the exine) is thick and cutinised while the inner (the intine) is delicate and cellulosic . • The exine may show; a - one, two or more minute thin areas or pits termed germ pores, through one of which the pollen tube protrudes. b- Germinal furrows which are grooves in the exine or narrow lanceolate thin areas are of common occurrence.They serve to accommodate the expansion and shrinkage of the pollen grain due to change in humidity. • Pollen grains are of the most characteristic elements found in powdered flower, are often of important value for the distinction of families and sometimes even of species. GYNÆCIUM • The gynæcium (pistil) is the female sexual organ. It consists of one or more carpels and thus described as mono-, bi- or poly- carpellary. • The carpels may be either free and thus the gynæcium is described as apocarpous, e.g. Aconitum or united together and thus syncarpous e.g. Papaver. • The carpel is a modified leaf, folded on itself and its margins cohere forming the ventral suture. The midrib is prominent on the opposite edge of the free carpel forming the dorsal suture or seen as a ridge in the back of each of the united carpels. The typical carpel (in the apocarpous or monocarpellary gynæcium) consists of: • The ovary: is the hollow basal portion, enclosing one or more ovules on the placenta (The organs to which ovules are attached =thickened cohering margins of the carpel). • The stigma: is the apical portion and is usually swollen, sticky and covered with papillae or glandular projections to receive the pollen grains. • The style: Is the slender stalk-like prolongation connecting the ovary with the stigma. It serves to place the stigma in the suitable positions for receiving the pollen. In the syncarpous gynæcium, the union of carpels may be either complete or partial: Complete union: The ovary is formed of united portions of more than one carpel and described as compound, the styles are fused together in one and the stigmas form an undivided structure, e.g. Nicotiana. Partial union: The carpels are united at the base of the ovaries only as in Ruta. The compound ovary may be surmounted with a number of free styles and stigmas corresponding to the number of carpels, e.g. Linum or bears a single style terminating with separated stigmas, e.g. Solanaceae,Compositae. Description of the Different Parts of Carpel A- Stigma • • The stigma with style (stalked) or without style (sessile) and inserted on the ovary . The stigma is described as capitate, when in the form of a swelling at the top of the style, e.g. Nicotiana; globose (globular), tubular; in the form of a hollow tube, e.g. Crocus; stellate, e.g. Papaver; branched (bi-, tri-, etc.-fid), e.g. Compositae (Asteraceae) (bi-), Euphorbiaceae (tri-); or plumose (feathery), e.g. Gramineae. • 一 B- Style The style may be very long and filamentous, e.g. Zea, very short, e.g. Cruciferae or totally wanting , e.g. Papaveraceae. It may become flattened and petaloid, e.g. Iridaceae. C- Ovary • • • • The ovary may be simple, formed of a single carpel or compounds of more than one carpel. It may exhibit one compartment, i.e., unilocular, which may be formed of a single carpel or syncarpous ovary; the number of placentae indicates the number of carpels, The compound ovary may be formed of two, three or more compartments, thus called bi-, tri- or multilocular, e.g. Rubiaceae (bi-), Euphorbiaceae (tri-).The walls separating the compartments are called septa. Pistillode carpel ;is a sterile carpel (no ovules) Insertion of the Ovary • Superior; when the floral parts are inserted on the receptacle below or on the same level as the ovary. • Inferior; when the floral parts appear inserted on the top of the ovary.This is due to the closing over or fusion of the receptacle with the ovary. Placentation Tybe of arrangement of placentas in the ovary. When there are numerous ovules in the ovary, the placentation may be: • Marginal: In simple monocarpellary ovary placentation is along the line of fusion, e.g. Leguminosae (unilocular ovary). • • Parietal: When the placentae turn along the lines of fusion of the carpels in unilocular compound ovary, forming longitudinal parallel lines but do not reach the centre e.g. Papaver. Axile or Central: When the ovules appear to be attached to the central axis, formed in the bi-to multilocular ovary by the united swollen edges of the carpels, e.g. Solanaceae. • Free central: When ovules are borne on a central axis arising from the base of a unilocular ovary and not in any way attached to ovary wall. When there is only one ovule in the ovary, the placentation may be: • Basal: When the single ovule is carried on a small placental tissue arising in the centre of the ovarian base eg Asteraceae • Apical: The same as basal but arising from the apical of the ovary as in Umbelliferae . RECEPTACLE • • • The receptacle (thalamus) is nearly always very short but occasionally, it is elongated. When the receptacle is elongated below the calyx and ovary, it is called hypanthium. as in Cloves The receptacle is usually flattened or convex, but may be conical bearing the floral whorls one above the other, below the ovary and in this case the flower is hypogynous. • It may widen out expanding into a flat, concave or even cup-shaped structure as in Rosa bearing the sepal,petal and stamens round the gynoecium. In such cases, the flower is perigynous. • Sometimes the receptacle forms a deep cup adhering to and enclosing the ovary, thus the flower is epigynous. THE INFLORESCENCE When a group of flowers are usually aggregated on the axis or rachis forming what is called inflorescence. KINDS OF INFLORESCENCE Racemose Indefinite monopodial branching Cymose Definite sympodial branching Mixed Inflorescence both racemose and cymose I- Racemose (Indefinite or Indeterminate) Inflorescence a- monopodial branching and the acropetal succession of the opening of the flowers, i.e., the youngest flower being at apex, if the axis is elongated, or at centre, if shortened, and the oldest flower at base or outside respectively. . b- The growing point has an indefinite power of growth and never ends in a flower. Racemose inflorescence may be either simple or compound. a- Simple Racemose Inflorescence has the flowers borne directly on the main axis.This includes the following types: • Raceme: With elongated axis bearing flowers with pedicels of nearly equal length. • Corymb: Differs from raceme in having shorter axis and pedicels of different lengths; those of the older or lower flowers being longer than those of the younger or upper ones so that the flowers are brought to one level. • Umbel: With very short axis, from which pedicels of nearly equal lengths are radiating, thus forming an umbrella-like structure. , Capitulum or Flower-head: With very short swollen axis which is either flattened or conical on which are inserted sessile small florets which is encircled by involucre (consisting of barren bracts). Usually there are two types of florets in the same capitulum: the central, which have tubular corolla and called tubular or disc florets, and the marginal, which have strap-like corolla, and called ligulate or ray florets. The florets may be, rarely, all alike as in Santonica (disc) and Dandelion (ray). In certain cases, e.g. Anthemis nobilis, each floret is subtended with a scale-like structure, called palea. . Spike: Having an elongated axis and sessile or nearly sessile flowers, e.g. Plantago. • Spadix: A spike with a thick fleshy axis and sessile, small, usually unisexual flowers and protected by a large green or coloured bract, called spathe . • Catkin: pendulous spike, occasionally erect, bearing usually small unisexual flowers, which are usually either all male or female. • Strobile: A spike with large membranous scales (bracts, bracteoles, etc.) concealing the sessile flowers. B- Compound Racemose Inflorescence has the flowers borne on branches of the main axis. This includes: . . . Panicle: A compound branched raceme, consisting of racemes arranged in a racemose manner on a primary axis. Panicled Corymb or Compound Corymb (Corymb of corymbs): A corymb where, instead of flowers, the pedicels bear other corymbs . Compound Umbel (Umbel of umbels): An umbel where the pedicels or rays put forth other rays or secondary pedicels, forming secondary small umbels or umbellules as in most of Apiaceae, e.g. Anise. • Compound Spike: A spike of sessile spikelets (small spikes) as in Wheat, Barley, etc. • Compound Capitulum: e.g. Ambrosia. • Compound Spadix: e.g. Palm. II -Cymose (Definite or Determinate) Inflorescence The sympodial branching and basipetal succession of the opening of the flowers, i.e., the oldest flower being at the centre and youngest, nearest the base or to the outside when seen from above. • The primary axis and the successive daughter axes, in turn, end in flowers; in other words the growth of the main axis is limited by the formation of a flower. • Simple Cyme: The main axis terminates in a flower and one, two or more stalked flowers arise on its pedicel, originally in the axil of bracteoles as in Tilia. This may appear as a simple umbel and thus, sometimes called cymose umbel. • Compound Cyme: The lateral branches continue to produce further branches with flowers. It may be: • A- B- Monochasium or one-sided cyme, where the main axis terminates in a flower which arises in the axil of a bract and its pedicel bears two bracteoles; one of which develops a lateral branch from the bud in its axil and so on, each branch ending in a flower. In this case there are two kinds: Helicoid cyme, is a unilateral cyme produced as a result of the development of the bud of only either the right-hand or lefthand bracteole. The inflorescence is generally coiled in a spiral as in, where the flowers are all on one side and the bract, on the opposite side of the axis. Scorpioid cyme, where the right-hand and left-hand branches develop alternately, thus, it forms a zigzag as in Iris. • Dichasium or two-sided cyme, where a branch is developed in the axil of each of the two opposite bracteoles or in other words two opposite branches arise on the pedicel of the terminal flower and so on. • Verticillaster, is a two cymose clusters of sessile flowers; each is situated in the axil of one of the two opposite leaf-like bracts. Each cluster has its oldest flower in the middle. ( It is a dichasial form) as in Labiatae. III- Mixed Inflorescence • When both racemose and cymose types of branching occur in the same inflorescence. Most commonly, the main axis is racemosely branched, while the terminal branches are of cymose order. In Labiatae (Lamiaceae), for example, it is a raceme of verticillasters, i.e., a number of verticillasters are arranged upon a parent axis in a racemose manner. FLOS CARYOPHYLLI CLOVE زهر القرنفل Syn. : Quoronful; Caryophyllum; Caryophyllus. • Clove is the dried flower-buds of Syzygium aromaticum (L.) (= Eugenia caryophyllus Fam. Myrtaceae. • Clove is from the Latin clavus, meaning a nail and refers to the shape of the whole spice. CLOVE زهر القرنفل Collection and Preparation The flower –buds are white in color when young, getting green and finally crimson. The crimson flowerbuds are collected (September to March) before the opening and expansion of the white corollas. Indigenous to Molucca Islands • They are either picked by hand or are knocked off by bamboo sticks. • They are carefully dried naturally in the sun. • During the drying process, the color changes from crimson, to deep reddish-brown. • • • • Description: The flower-buds are bright reddish-brown to dark brown and wrinkled externally. The hypanthium, is solid, cylindrical, somewhat flattened, four-sided, tapering towards the base. The sepals at the apex of hypanthium, four thick, triangular, divergent acute spreading. The petals alternating with sepals, four rounded, nexpanded, membranous, imbricated, bowl-shaped forming spherical dome-shaped head and enclosing stamens • • • • The stamens are numerous indefinite, tetradelphous curved inwards. The filaments of each group being slightly adherent at the base and the bundles are opposite the petals. Anthers are introrse. They are inserted on a small, nectar disc and a stiff, slender, erect, single style arising from a depression in the centre. Pollen grains: are triangular, with truncate, somewhat emarginate apices or oval in outline. Internally • The hypanthium contains in its upper portion the ovary, inferior, bicarpellary, bilocular, with numerous ovules attached to an axile placenta. • Outer zone very large with numerous shining oval oil glands near the periphery. • Nnumerous vascular bundles in the middle. • A dark lacunous layer abutting on the central zone (columella). N.B. : 1. After removing the corolla, clove sinks when thrown into water. 2. The tissues of clove contain neither sclereids nor prisms of calcium oxalate. 3. Starch, trichomes and long fibres are absent. Powder Powdered clove is dark brown in color, having strong, spicy, aromatic odor and agreeable, warm, pungent, spicy taste, followed by a slight sensation of numbness; microscopically characterized by : 1. Parenchyma with cluster crystals of calcium oxalate. 2. Fragments of epidermis with thick-walled cells and few anomocytic stomata of hypanthium and sepals. 3. Fragments of parenchyma tissue showing broken or entire oil glands. 4. Numerous pollen grains, appearing either triangular with truncate somewhat emarginate apices or oval in outline. 5. Fragments of the fibrous layer of the anther wall. Constituents: • Volatile oil (~ 15 – 20%) contains eugenol (84-90%), acetyl eugenol , -, - and –caryophyllenes. • Gallotannic acid (10 – 13%). Uses: - Agreeable aromatic stimulant, analgesic, antispasmodic, carminative and antiseptic. - It is used for gastroenteritis and intestinal parasites. - Toothache, insect bites and in dental industry. - Production of vanillin. Dose: 0.6-4.0 g. Adulteration of clove 1-Clove Stalks: These are the slender stems of the inflorescence axis which show opposite decussate branching. They yield about 5 – 7% of volatile oil, less pleasantly aromatic than that of cloves. 2- Mother Clove(Anthophylli): The ripe fruit Is ovoid, brown, unilocular and one-seeded.It contains much less volatile oil than clove (2-9%).Fruit can be detected in powdered clove by presence of starch. because the seeds contain much starch (cloves are free). 3- Blown Cloves: They are the expanded flowers from which both corolla and stamens have been detached. The separated corollas and stamens form a product known as “Clove dust”. 4- Exhausted Cloves: They are cloves from which all or almost all of the oil has been removed by distillation. They are darker in colour, much shrunken yield no oil when indented with the thumb-nail and floats on water. Tests for Identity 1. Mix a little of powdered clove with a few drops of ferric chloride T.S.; a deep blue colour is produced in all elements, except fibres. 2. On a slide, mix a little of powdered clove with few drops of alc. KOH 50%, aggregates of needle crystals of potassium eugenolate can be seen by microscope. Pharmaceutical Preparations 1- With laxative pills. 2- Tooth pastes. 3- Clovacaine solution (oral inflammation and local anesthetic). 4- Eugenol or clove oil mixed with zinc oxide [temporary filling]. Mouth washes. Side effect; Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, difficult in breathing, intestinal bleading and liver or kidney failure. FLOS HIBISCI RED SORREL زهر الكركديه Syn.: Karkadé; Hibiscus; Roselle; Jamaica Sorrel. Definition: Red sorrel consists of the dried calyx and epicalyx of the flowers of Hibiscus sabdariffa L. Fam. Malvaceae. Geographical Source: The plant is indigenous to subtropical regions, South of Egypt, Nuba, Sudan. • • • • Description The calyx: is petaloid, consists of 5 united, purplish to crimson red cup-shaped sepals. Each segment is triangular, acuminate apex, entire ciliate margin and rough surface. The epicalyx: consists of 8 to 10 linear oblong villose or tuberculate bracts or bracteoles connate below the base of calyx. The drug consists of dry dark crimson red, curled, curved pieces, The upper surface is yellowish-red, darkens toward the apex to dark crimson red. The pieces show auricularshaped projections (tip of epicalyxes segment) at the junctions of the wide basal part of the segment of calyx. It has a characteristic aromatic odor and warm slightly acidic, mucilaginous taste. Structure • Epicalyx: • The epidermal cells are polygonal, tabular, nearly isodiametric, straight anticlinal walls, covered with thick striated cuticle, anomocytic stomata, non-glandular unicellular hairs of long, thick-walled, wide lumen, tapering apex, covered with smooth cuticle, arise from ring-like cicatrix surrounded by radiating epidermal cells. • Calyx: • The lower (outer) epidermal cells are polygonal, tabular with straight, irregularly thickened anticlinal walls, faintly striated cuticle and anomocytic stomata. • Non-glandular hairs on calyx are: – Unicellular long as in epicalyx. – Allembic hairs near the veins. – Cottony, non-glandular sometimes grouped in stella. – Stellate hairs of large, straight, unicellular arms. – Asperities of multicellular, uniseriate structure, situated near the margin. • The upper (inner) epidermal cells are polygonal, tabular and larger than the lower, having straight, beaded anticlinal walls, smooth cuticle, no hairs or stomata. Powder Powdered red sorrel is crimson red in colour, having characteristic, aromatic odour and warm, slightly acidic, mucilaginous taste; microscopically characterized by: • Fragments of epicalyx showing epidermis with straight anticlinal walls; thick, striated cuticle, anomocytic stomata and non-glandular, unicellular hairs arising from a cicatrix. • Fragments of calyx showing outer epidermis with straight, irregularly-thickened anticlinal walls, striated cuticle and anomocytic stomata. • • • • 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Constituents Organic acids (15%); citric, tartaric, malic, hibiscic acids. Large amount of mucilage. Coloring matter of anthocyanins,e.g. gossipetin and Hibiscin , flavonoids,e.g. hibiscetin. Tannins and vitamin C. Tests for Identity powder, boil in 1% HCl, filtrate is dark red. Filtrate + KOH, a blue colour is produced. Filtrate + 5 ml sodium acetate T.S., a violet colour appears. Filtrate + few drops dil NH4OH + 1-2 drops FeCl3 T.S.,a full black colour is produced. Filtrate + conc. NH4OH, a green colour appears. Filtrate + 6 ml 10% lead acetate , a blue precipitate is deposited. Actions and Uses It decreases blood pressure of hypertensive persons, i.e., antihypertensive (no effect on normal persons). 1. As a source of vitamin C (6.7 mg /100 gr.). 2. It is a weight-reducing agent[ loss of appetite] 3. The red coloring matter is used in cosmetics, jams and also used as a poultice on abscesses. 4. Diuretic, laxative and sedative. 5. Colds and upper respiratory tract congestion. Contra-indication Red sorrel (Karkadé) is not advised to be used by people suffering from kidney diseases.