Vitex negundo
Vitex negundo L.
Ordre | Asterales |
---|---|
Famille | Asteraceae |
Genre | Vitex |
2n =
Origine : Asie du Sud, Afrique de l'Est
sauvage ou cultivé
Français | negundo |
---|---|
Anglais | five-leaved chaste tree |
Résumé des usages
- médicinal
- ornemental
- planté en haies
Description
- Vitex cannabifolia4.jpg
arbre
- Vitex negundo 2017-05-31 1555.jpg
feuilles
- 牡荊 Vitex negundo v cannabifolia -香港龍虎山 Lung Fu Shan, Hong Kong- (14067551413).jpg
fleurs
Noms populaires
français | negundo |
anglais | chaste tree, five-leaf chaste tree (Flowers of India) ; five-leaved chaste tree, horseshoe vitex (PROSEA) |
espagnol | negundo macho de la India |
chinois | 黄荆 - huang jing (Flora of China) |
sanscrit | sinduvara, indrani, nilanirgundi (Flowers of India) |
hindi | निर्गुंडी - nirgundi, सिंदवार - sindvar (Flowers of India) |
ourdou | sambhalu, tukhm sambhalu (Flowers of India) |
bengali | nishinda (Flowers of India) |
telugu | vavili (Flowers of India) |
tamoul | nocchi (Flowers of India) |
kannada | nochi (Flowers of India) |
malayalam | vennocchi (Flowers of India) |
manipuri | ꯎꯔꯤꯛꯁꯤꯕꯤ - urik shibi (Flowers of India) |
mizo | palchawi (Flowers of India) |
Philippines | lagundi (filipino), dangla (iloko) (PROSEA) |
Indonésie | ai tuban (Amboine), lagundi laut laki-laki (Malais, Moluques) (PROSEA) |
Malaysia | lagundi, lemuning, lenggundi (péninsule) |
Papouasie-Nouvelle-Guinée | paparau (Kurtachi, Bougainville) (PROSEA) |
Thaïlande | khon thee khamoa (centre), ku-no-kaa-mo (malais, Pattani), kuuning (malais, Narathiwat) (PROSEA) |
Vietnam | ngũ trảo (PROSEA) |
Cambodge | trasiet (PROSEA) |
Classification
Vitex negundo L. (1753)
Cultivars
Histoire
- Hortus Indicus Malabaricus BHL463761.jpg
bem-nosi vol. 2 pl. 12 Rheede, Hortus Malabaricus, 1679, vol. 2 pl. 12
- Vitex negundo Blanco1.228.png
Blanco, 1880-1883, Flora de Filipinas
- The Botanical Magazine, Plate 364 (Volume 11, 1797).png
The Botanical Magazine, 1797, vol. 11, pl. 364
Usages
In India cultivated as a hedge plant and windbreak, used also in folk medicine. In Korea and Japan commercially grown as a medicinal herb. Also widespread cultivated as an ornamental plant. Wild distribution: Tropical to warm-temperate Asia.
Mansfeld.