Centaurea behen
Centaurea behen | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
(unranked): | Angiosperms |
(unranked): | Eudicots |
(unranked): | Asterids |
Order: | Asterales |
Family: | Asteraceae |
Tribe: | Cynareae |
Genus: | Centaurea |
Species: | C. behen |
Binomial name | |
Centaurea behen L. | |
Centaurea behen is a species of Centaurea that grows in the wild under full sun in northern Iraq and Armenia and in many other areas of Western and Central Asia with a roughly similar environment, stretching from Lebanon to Kazakhstan.[1] It is grown under cultivation in northern India for the medicinal use of its roots.
The plant's leaves at and near ground-level are relatively large, comparable to broad dock or spinach leaves. Rising above those leaves are branching stalks that carry much smaller lightweight leaves and, when in flower, small yellow flowers. Including the upper stalks, the plant is typically a little less than a meter high off the ground. The plant has multiple thick roots. The roots have a brown skin on the outside and a white color internally. The roots come to commerce in a dryed form, looking shrivelled, and then are ground to a powder, and used for several traditional herbal medicine purposes. The roots are called Behman Safed, aka White Behmen, Safaid Behmen, in Ayurvedic Indian medicine.[2]
Footnotes
- ↑ Centaurea behen @ CatalogueOfLife.org.
- ↑ The Principal Drugs of Vegetable Origin Met with in British India, volume 2, by Dymock et al., year 1891 pages 303-306.