Gynura pseudochina
Asteraceae FAMILY

Gynura pseudochina

Gynura pseudochina

Edibility
2/5
Medicinal
2/5

Safety & Hazards

None known

Botanical Description

Gynura pseudochina is a semi-succulent, perennial herbaceous plant producing stems up to 130cm tall from hard, woody tubers[ 332 Title The Useful Plants of West Tropical Africa. Publication Author Burkil. H. M. Publisher Royal Botanic Gardens; Kew. Year 1985 - 2004 ISBN Description Brief descriptions and details of the uses of over 4,000 plants. A superb, if terse, resource, it is also available electronically on the Web - see http://www.aluka.org/ ]. The plant is harvested from the wild for local use as a food and medicine - it is commonly cultivated for food and medicine in E Nigeria[ 332 Title The Useful Plants of West Tropical Africa. Publication Author Burkil. H. M. Publisher Royal Botanic Gardens; Kew. Year 1985 - 2004 ISBN Description Brief descriptions and details of the uses of over 4,000 plants. A superb, if terse, resource, it is also available electronically on the Web - see http://www.aluka.org/ ].

Habitat & Origin

Origintropical
Native RangeE. Asia - southern China, Bhutan, India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand. Tropical west Africa - Guinea to N. Nigeria, Cameroon.
HabitatSandy places on slopes, forest margins, roadsides; at elevations from 200 - 2,100 metres in China[ 266 Title Flora of China Publication Author Website http://flora.huh.harvard.edu/china/ Publisher Missouri Botanical Garden Press; St. Louis. Year 1994 ISBN Description An excellent, comprehensive resource in 25 volumes. In addition to the botanical information the flora also gives basic information on habitat and some uses. An on-line version is also available. ]. Rocky hill savannah in Africa[ 332 Title The Useful Plants of West Tropical Africa. Publication Author Burkil. H. M. Publisher Royal Botanic Gardens; Kew. Year 1985 - 2004 ISBN Description Brief descriptions and details of the uses of over 4,000 plants. A superb, if terse, resource, it is also available electronically on the Web - see http://www.aluka.org/ ].