1st Edition

Advances in Medicinal and Aromatic Plants Production, Processing, and Pharmaceutics, 2-volume set

    882 Pages 5 Color & 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Apple Academic Press

    882 Pages 5 Color & 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Apple Academic Press

    This new two-volume book categorically provides detailed information on highly demanded and medicinally important plants and their natural habits and habitats, taxonomy, cultivation practices, essential oils, active ingredients, biomolecules, modes of action, drug development, and value additions for marketing purpose.

    Examples of such plants include Achillea spp. (yarrow), Acorus calamus (sweet flag), Ocimum spp. (basil), Dioscorea spp., Eucalyptus spp., Commiphora spp. (guggul), Kaempferia galanga (aromatic ginger), and Lavandula spp. (lavender). Many others are included in the volume as well.

    With contributions from international experts, these two volumes present chapters that detail the history of these major medicinal and aromatic plants and also report on systematic botany, advanced production and propagation technologies, plant nutrition, moisture management, intercultivation, plant protection, postharvest technology, processing-value addition, and marketing trade. Further, the book presents promising low-cost and ecofriendly plant products and biomolecules, which are free from side-effects for use as pharmaceuticals and herbal drugs.

    The most ancient form of medical therapies involving herbs has been neglected for a few decades back and has regained enormous popularity because of the effectiveness and fewer hazardous properties of many medicinal and aromatic plants. Nature has all sorts of protective medicinal compounds within its huge bioresources, which are still being identified for beneficial health purposes. Herbs containing aromatic properties because of their essential oils also have medicinal uses apart from being used as dependable sources of natural fragrance for cosmetics, perfumery, and food industries competing with synthetic aroma chemicals.

    These volumes will be an excellent and comprehensive compendium for academicians and professionals working in plant resources. The compilation will also be valuable for students, researchers, medical practitioners, farmers, entrepreneurs, traders, industrialists, and NGOs who are involved in research and development and production and pharmaceutics of medicinally important plants.

    VOLUME 1

    1. Achillea (Yarrow): Diversity, Trade Potential, and Ethnomedicinal Uses

    Mustafa Eray Bozyel, Elif Merdamert Bozyel and Amritesh C. Shukla

    2. Acorus calamus L. (Sweet Flag): Bioactive Compounds, Medicinal Properties, and Biological Activity

    Sabyasachi Banerjee, Karan Kumar Das, Goutam Pal, and Sankhadip Bose

    3. Ocimum Spp. (Basil): An Incredible Plant

    Moumita Malakar and Debashis Mandal

    4. Dioscorea Spp: Medicinal Plant with Pharmaceutical Uses

    Raza Waris, Priyanka Agnihotri, Debashis Mandal and Amritesh C. Shukla

    5. Eucalyptus Spp.: A Wonder Tree

    Moumita Malakar

    6. Commiphora Spp. (Guggul): A Wonder Ayurvedic Drug

    Jai Malik and Subash C. Mandal

    7. Kaempferia galanga L. (Aromatic Ginger): A High Potential Zingiberaceae Species

    Lilly Zeitler

    8. Lavandula Spp. (Lavender): A Herb More Than Just a Relaxing Scent

    Moumita Malakar

    VOLUME 2

    1. Mentha Spp.: A Miraculous Plant with Pharmaceutical Uses

    Ankita Maurya, Richa Sharma, Himanshu Yadav, Debashis Mandal, and Amritesh C. Shukla

    2. Neem: A Drug Cabinet of Mother Nature

    Moumita Malakar and Debashis Mandal

    3. Patchouli (Pogostemon cablin Benth.) A Comprehensive Review of Medicinal Aromatic Plant with Industrial Utilization

    Sonia Singh, Shilpi Pathak, Nidhi Sharma, and Nitin Agrawal

    4. Pippali (Piper longum L.): A Plant with Versatile Pharmaceutical Uses

    Richa Sharma, Ankita Maurya, Himanshu Yadav, Amritesh C. Shukla, and Sumpam Tangjang

    5. Pomegranate (Punica cranatum): A Medicinal and Commercial Perspective

    Shilpavakshasya and Gopal Dixit

    6. Rhubarb (Rheum Sp. ): A Rare and Endangered Medicinal Plant of the Himalaya

    Meenakshi Thakur

    7. Rose (Rosa Sp. ): More Than Beautiful: Exploring the Therapeutic Properties of Rose Species

    Naoko Takahashi

    8. Safed Musli: A Critical Review on Bioactive Compounds, Medicinal Properties, and Biological Activity

    Sabyasachi Banerjee, Utsab Chakraborty, and Sankhadip Bose

    9. Bishop’s Weed or Ajwain (Trachyspermum ammi Linn.): A Traditional Medicinal Plant with Pharmacological Importance, Ethno-Botanical Uses, and Nutritional Benefits for Quality Life Improvement

    Somenath Das

    10. Tinospora cordifolia (Willd.) Miers: A Review on Medicinal Aromatic Plant with Industrial and Therapeutical Utilization

    Sonia Singh, Nitin Agrawal, and Yogesh Murti

    11. An Emerging Gift of Nature and Bioprospection Towards the Development of Novel Herbal Formulation, Nutraceuticals, and Cosmetics

    Dhrubojyoti Mukherjee, Partha Palit, Shubhadeep Roychoudhury, Shubhajit Halder, and Subhash C. Mandal

    Biography

    Amritesh C. Shukla, PhD, DSc, is currently Professor in the Department of Botany at the University of Lucknow, India. Dr. Shukla has more than 20 years of experience in natural products and drug development. He has standardized various techniques, such as MSGIT, MDKT, MS-97, and Modified NCCLS (2002-03) and has developed six commercial herbal formulations; he is credited with several US, UK, Japan, and Indian patents. He has published over 75 research papers and 15 articles and book chapters as well as several books. He has handled many externally funded research projects. He is a fellow of five national and international societies and also a Visiting Professor at the University of British Columbia, Canada, and the University of Mauritius. In addition, he is working as chief editor, associate editor, and editorial board member of many internationally reputed journals, including the American Journal of Food Technology, Journal of Pharmacology and Toxicology, and the Research Journal of Medicinal Plants, among others. He was an invited scientist for countries, including Germany, China, Switzerland, USA, Australia, and Korea. Dr. Shukla has received a number of awards and acknowledgments for his work in his field. His research interests include bioprospection of medicinal and aromatic plants, natural products, pesticidal formulation for postharvest pests and diseases, and drug development and testing.

    Sunita Facknath, PhD, is a Professor engaged in teaching and research in agricultural technology for the past 25 years at the University of Mauritius. She had published more than 100 research papers, articles in reputed journals, and conference proceedings. In addition, she has dealt with 20 research projects funded by important renowned institutes and agencies, including the World Bank, European Union, International Atomic Energy Agency, ACU, African Union, Climate and Development Knowledge Network (CDKN) and Development Finance International (DFI) , etc. She is a consultant agriculturist for many public-private sector organizations and NGOs based in Mauritius (FAO, EUCDP, UNDP, UNEP-Mauritius, FANRPAN, Mauritius Research Council, Govt. of Mauritius; SGS Co Ltd., DDS and MACOSS etc.). She guided 15 MPhil and PhD students and also has profound administrative experience from the University of Mauritius and also at multiple national and international bodies, including the African Network of Research on Bruchids, Mauritius Council for Social Services (MACOSS), African Regional Programme in Insect Science (ARPIS) Academic Board, Fishermen Investment Trust, Ministry of Fisheries and Rodrigues, National Biosecurity Technical Advisory Committee, Mauritius Standards Bureau Committee, National Marine Biotechnology Advisory Council, National Ocean Knowledge Cluster Advisory Council, UoM Senate, etc.

    Debashis Mandal, PhD, is Assistant Professor in the Department of Horticulture, Aromatic and Medicinal Plants at Mizoram University, Aizawl, Mizoram, India. He was previously Assistant Professor at Sikkim University, India, and has published many research papers in journals and book chapters. He has also published several books. In addition, he is working as a member in the Workgroup Lychee, Longan, and Other Sapindaceae Fruits of the International Society for Horticultural Science, Belgium, as well as with other ISHS sections on tropical-subtropical fruits and organic horticulture and on the Commission Quality and Postharvest Horticulture. Currently he is also working as Editor-in-Lead (Horticulture) for the International Journal of Bio Resources & Stress Management (IJBSM). Dr. Mandal is an editorial advisor in Horticulture Science to Cambridge Scholars Publishing, UK, and a regular reviewer for journals such as Fruits, HortScience, Acta Physiologica Plantarum, and African Journal of Agricultural Research. Further, he is a consultant horticulturist to the Department of Horticulture & Agriculture (Research & Extension), Government of Mizoram, India, and Himadri Specialty Chemicals Ltd. He is also handling externally funded research projects. He acted as convener or co-convener for several conferences and symposia as well.

    Bernadette Montanari, PhD, is an ethnobotanist, ethnobiologist, with a PhD in ethnobiology from the School of Anthropology and Conservation, University of Kent, UK. Her research focuses on community development and women’s social enterprise, ethnomedicine, traditional ecological knowledge, essential oils, natural resource management, governance, policies, and social justice. Recipient of two major EU grants, she was a postdoctoral visiting scholar at the Social Dimensions of Environmental Policy (SDEP), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA; at the International Institute of Social Studies (ISS), Erasmus University, Rotterdam, Netherlands; and recently at the Centre for Research in Anthropology (CRIA), University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal. She has published several book chapters and research papers in reputed international journals. Dr. Montanari is a member of the Centre for Biocultural Diversity, UK; of the Interdisciplinary Institute for Social Sciences (2i2s), Fes, Morocco; and committee member of the National Conservatory of Aromatic and Medicinal Plants and the French Society of Ethnopharmacology, France. In addition, she is a member in several IUCN research groups: SULI-IUCN; Species Survival Commission (SSC) and Commission on Environmental, Economic and Social Policy (CEESP); IPACC, North Africa; IUCN Gender; IUCN Plant Use Group; IUCN CEESP Governance, Equity and Rights Network 2021-2025; and Local Economies, Communities and Nature Specialist Group (LECN), among others.