Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Mimosa rubicaulis

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Fabaceae

Genus
  
Mimosa

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Fabales

Subfamily
  
Mimosoideae

Scientific name
  
Mimosa rubicaulis

Mimosa rubicaulis httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Mimosa hamata, Mimosa turneri, Mimosa arenosa, Mimosa aculeaticarpa, Mimosa verrucosa

Mimosa rubicaulis is a shrub belonging to Fabaceae and subfamily Mimosoideae. It is bipinnately compound, each leaf having 8-12 pairs of pinnae, each with 16-20 pairs of pinnules, unlike Mimosa pudica which has at most two prickly pairs of leaflets. It is found across India.

Description

M. rubicaulis is a large, straggling, very prickly shrub. It flowers from June to September, sporting long clusters of many pink spherical flower heads 1–1.5 cm across. The flowers fade to white, so the clusters sport both pink and white flower-heads most of the time. Leaves are double-compound, 8–15 cm long, with thorny rachis. Leaves have 3–2 pairs of side-stalks, each with 6–15 pairs of tiny oblong leaflets 4–8 mm. Pods are thin, flat, curved, 8–13 cm long, 1 cm wide, breaking into 4–10 rectangular single-seeded units, leaving the remains of the pod attached to the shoot.

It is considered useful for hedges. The wood is suitable for tent pegs and for making gunpowder charcoal. Roots and leaves are used medicinally. Himalayan Mimosa is found in the Himalayas, from Afghanistan to Bhutan, at altitudes of 300–1900 m. It prefers forest edges and boundaries of fields and gardens.

References

Mimosa rubicaulis Wikipedia