“…The leaves are used to treat rheumatism, colic problems, diarrhea, and suppression of lochia after childbirth (Kirtikar & Basu, ). Besides its use in traditional medicine and Indian cookery, the leaves of C. tamala have been reported to possess antidiabetic, antioxidant (Chakraborty & Das, ), antidiarrheal (Rao, Vijayakumar, Sairam, & Kumar, ), antihyperlipidemic (Dhulasavant, Shinde, Pawar, & Naikwade, ), antioxygenic (Semwal, Sharma, & Arya, ), anti‐inflammatory (Gambhire, Juvekar, & Wankhede, ), acaricidal (Reddy, Srinivasa, & Muralidhara, ), hepatoprotective (Kumar, Vasudeva, & Sharma, ), gastroprotective (Eswaran et al, ), antibacterial, and immunomodulatory activities (Chaurasia, Pandey, & Tripathi, ). The C. tamala leaf essential oil (CTEO) commonly contains α‐linalool (3,7‐dimethylocta‐1,6‐dien‐3‐ol), α‐pinene (2,6,6‐trimethylbicyclo[3.1.1]hept‐2‐ene), β‐pinene (6,6‐dimethyl‐2‐methylidenebicyclo[3.1.1]heptanes), limonene (1‐methyl‐4‐prop‐1‐en‐2‐ylcyclohexene), camphene (2,2‐dimethyl‐3‐methylidenebicyclo[2.2.1]heptanes), eugenol (2‐methoxy‐4‐prop‐2‐enylphenol), β‐caryophyllene (4,11,11‐trimethyl‐8‐methylidenebicyclo[7.2.0]undec‐4‐ene), p‐cymene (1‐methyl‐4‐propan‐2‐ylbenzene) and geraniol (3,7‐dimethylocta‐2,6‐dien‐1‐ol) among other compounds (Chanotiya & Yadav, ; Kumar, Sharma, & Vasudeva, ; Pubchem).…”