Stewart listed Bergenia himalaica (syn. B.ciliata var. ligulata, 
B.ligulata) as common & gregarious on shady cliffs @ 1800-3000m in Kashmir.

He mentioned B.ciliata var. ciliata as only recorded from Hazara and Kagan 
Valley.   There has clearly been confusion between these similar taxa.

Ghazanfar in Saxifragaceae (Flora of Pakistan, 1977) recognised only 2 
species in Pakistan: B.stracheyi and B.ciliata, splitting the latter into 
forma ciliata
and forma ligulata on the basis of the hirsute leaves of the former (though 
sometimes glabrous upper surface)..  She considered forma ciliata as very 
common on rocks in and around the Murree area. 

*Nowadays, B.ciliata forma ligulata (or B.himalaica as Stewart knew it) is 
Bergenia pacumbis.  I think the plant photographed in the Deovan Herbal 
Garden is this rather than what is now the separate B.ciliata - though I 
think there has been confusion between some forms of both.*

*The plant used medicinally is mainly or perhaps exclusively Bergenia 
pacumbis incl. the specimens I saw being cultivated in the Medicinal Plants 
Section of the Nehru Botanical Garden, Srinagar, Kashmir.*


On Saturday, September 24, 2011 at 3:05:07 AM UTC+1, Balkar wrote:

> Dear All
> Bergenia ciliata from Deovan Herbal Garden
> an important Herbal medicine for Kidney Stones
> Thanks
>
> -- 
> Regards
>
> Dr Balkar Singh
> Head, Deptt. of Botany and Biotechnology
> Arya P G College, Panipat
> Haryana-132103
> 09416262964
>

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