2019
DOI: 10.36808/if/2019/v145i2/144284
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Assessment of the Floristic Composition, Biological Spectrum, Leaf Size Spectra and Traditional Conservation Management of A Sacred Grove in West Midnapore District, West Bengal, India

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Cited by 4 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Another 30 families each carried only a single species (Table 1). Similar types of distribution of dominant families has been found in sacred groves of India and were highlighted by Rajendraprasad et al (1998), Gnanasekaran et al (2012), Ghildiyal et al (2016), Sen (2016) and Sen and Bhakat (2019) amongst others.…”
Section: Different Plant Taxasupporting
confidence: 78%
“…Another 30 families each carried only a single species (Table 1). Similar types of distribution of dominant families has been found in sacred groves of India and were highlighted by Rajendraprasad et al (1998), Gnanasekaran et al (2012), Ghildiyal et al (2016), Sen (2016) and Sen and Bhakat (2019) amongst others.…”
Section: Different Plant Taxasupporting
confidence: 78%
“…Another 30 families each carried only a single species (Table 1). Similar types of distribution of dominant families has been found in sacred groves of India and were highlighted by Rajendraprasad et al (1998), Gnanasekaran et al (2012), Ghildiyal et al (2016), Sen (2016) and Sen and Bhakat (2019) amongst others.…”
Section: Different Plant Taxasupporting
confidence: 77%
“…However, in the Indian tropics, cryptophytes died back to underground storage organs to survive the unfavourable dry period, fire, etc. In the tropical ecosystem, cryptophytes were conceived as relics of the paleoclimate, which prevailed prior to the present exterminating of the Indian subcontinent [53][54]. According to Zohary [55], a fraction of the flora of a place might be in discordance with the present-day climate and could be the remnant of past climate.…”
Section: Discussion: Patterns In Biological Spectrummentioning
confidence: 99%