Thank you very much Garg ji.
Regards.
Dinesh

On Sat, Dec 9, 2017 at 9:23 PM, JM Garg <jmga...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I think *Gossypium hirsutum L.*
> <https://sites.google.com/site/efloraofindia/species/m---z/m/malvaceae/gossypium/gossypium-hirsutum>
>  only
> as per images herein
>
> On Sunday, 8 November 2009 23:24:59 UTC+5:30, Dinesh Valke wrote:
>>
>> Dear friends,
>> ... while searching for *Gossypium hirsutum* on the internet, found lot
>> of matter that enlightened me ... for instance, there are only four species
>> among 42 which are cultivated, rest being of wild nature ... the four
>> namely *G. arboreum*, *G. herbaceum*, *G. hirsutum* and *G. barbadense*.
>> The first two species are diploid ... and are native of old world ... the
>> last two are tetraploid ... referred to as New world cottons.
>> *G. hirsutum* is the predominant species, which alone contributes about
>> 90% to the global production.
>> ... interesting reading at http://www.kapasindia.com/TMCO
>> nline/root/common/GeneralCottonCul.asp
>>
>>
>> Attached is a 17 MAY 09 photo shot at a villager's backyard in Yeoor
>> Hills, Sanjay Gandhi National Park, Thane, showing a burst cotton pod.
>> Would it tell us whether it belongs to diploid and tetraploid plant ?
>>
>>
>> Regards.
>>
>

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