Gmelina arborea
Scientific name: Gmelina arborea
Family: Verbenaceae
Common names: Gamhar, Beechwood, Gmelina,
Goomar teak, Kashmir tree, Malay beechwood, White teak, Vemane
Description: Gmelina
arborea locally known as Gamhar, is a fast growing tree, which grows on
different localities and prefers moist fertile valleys with 750–4500 mm
rainfall. It does not thrive on ill-drained soils and remains stunted on dry,
sandy or poor soils; drought also reduces it to a shrubby form.
The Gmelina
arborea tree attains moderate
to large height up to 30 m. Wood
is pale yellow to cream coloured or plukish-buff when fresh, turning yellowish
brown on exposure and is soft to moderately hard, light to moderately heavy,
lustrous when fresh, usually straight to irregular or rarely wavy grained and
medium course textured. Flowering takes place during February to April when the
tree is more or less leafless whereas fruiting starts from May onwards up to
June. The fruit is up to 2.5 cm long, smooth, dark green, turning yellow
when ripe and has a fruity smell.
This tree is commonly planted as a garden and an avenue tree;
growing in villages along agricultural land and on village community lands and
wastelands. It is light demander, tolerant of excessive drought, but moderately
frost hardy. It has good capacity to recover from frost injury. Gamhar trees
coppices very well with vigorous growth.
Medicinal Uses:
The root and bark of Gmelina arborea
are stomachic, galactagogue laxative and anthelmintic; improve appetite, useful
in hallucination, piles, abdominal pains, burning sensations, fevers,
‘tridosha’ and urinary discharge. Leaf paste is applied to relieve headache and
juice is used as wash for ulcers. Flowers are sweet, cooling, bitter, acrid and
astringent. They are useful in leprosy and blood diseases. In Ayurveda it has
been observed that Gamhar fruit is acrid, sour, bitter, sweet, cooling,
diuretic tonic, aphrodisiac, alternative astringent to the bowels, promote
growth of hairs, useful in ‘vata’, thirst, anaemia, leprosy, ulcers and vaginal
discharge. The plant is recommended in combination with other drugs for the
treatment of snake – bite and scorpion- sting. In snake – bite a decoction of
the root and bark is given internally.
Gmelina arborea Flower |
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