this particular one was not thorny
and do rubiaceae members have chordate leaves? i do not know.
could this one by one of the malvaceae trees or larger shrubs?

On Nov 8, 4:08 pm, Satish Phadke <drsmpha...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Another plant which came to my mind is *Ceriscoides turgida* also has
> similar name Fetara or Petara
> I don't remember about its leaves but
> --It has yellow bark; peeling.
> -- it is thorny.
> -- Rubiaceae.Opposite leaves.
> -- Fruits Not sure if edible They look like Kavath.
>
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Nov 8, 2011 at 3:35 PM, jui <juipe...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Tree (15-20 feet the one i saw)
> > bark peeling into Yellow white bark
>
> >  Leaves opposite
> > ovate with acuminate apex
> > chordate base
> > 10-17 cm long
> > crenate margin
> > petiole is long 15 cm not reddish more green brown
> > the leaf scar was seen on the bark when leaf was shed
>
> > the stem was fibrous as in the (tiliaceae, malvaceae, sterculiaceae
> > etc) group
>
> > local people call it petari and said that the fruits were edible
>
> > many of the malvaceae members are locally called petari...but i doubt
> > if they have opposite leaves.
>
> > I would appreciate even family identification as i have not been able
> > to observe the flowering
>
> > I tried to upload the photos but there seems to be some problem so i
> > am fwding the link on flicker pls follow the same for the set of fotos
> > of the plant
> >http://www.flickr.com/photos/69588091@N06/6325576954/
>
> > Regards
>
> > Jui
>
> --
> Dr Satish Phadke

Reply via email to