Ankur Patwardhan

Conservation and Promotion of Endangered Medicinal Plant Species from Western Ghats of India

Dysoxylum binectariferum.

Canarium recovery in the wild.

Cultivation of endangered Saraca asocka, credit Dr. Ankur Patwardhan.

Town/RegionCountryCategoriesDate
Northern Western GhatsIndiaBiodiversity, Indian Sub-continent, Plants27 Feb 2009

Western Ghats of India is one of the 34 globally recognized biodiversity hotspots known for its rich diversity of medicinal plant species. Several plant species are becoming globally important due to newfound curative properties. They yield high value metabolites and are threatened globally and endemic to Western Ghats.

Unsustainable harvesting in large volumes by forest contractors through local tribals was found to be one of the reasons for its depletion. Reducing harvest pressure on wild population of ‘red list’ species and promoting viable commercial cultivation with the community and government participation is a huge challenge. The present project involves local collectors in conservation, training them in raising quality planting stock and mass propagation / cultivation.

Read about Ankur's previous project at http://www.ruffordsmallgrants.org/rsg/projects/ankur_patwardhan or for more information contact ankurpatwardhan@bsnl.in and ankurpatwardhan@gmail.com

Project Updates

Read about the latest progress of this project in the report below.

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April 200922 KB
July 200923.5 KB
October 200923 KB
December 200922 KB
March 201022.5 KB
August 201023 KB
Final Report

Read more about the activities undertaken and findings of this project in the final reports below.

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Final Report693.5 KB
Detailed Final Report1.7 MB

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