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Himalayan Medicinal Plants. Advances in Botany, Production & Research

  • Book

  • January 2021
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5180552

The Himalayan Region is a mega hot spot for biological diversity. It supports over 1,748 plants species of known medicinal value. This title focuses on origin and distribution of Himalayan herbs, their medicinal potential, industrial significance, and research advancements pertaining to molecular breeding and omics-based approaches.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2. Aconitum heterophyllum 3. Arnebia euchroma 4. Dactylorhiza hatagirea 5. Fritillaria roylei 6. Picrorhiza kurroa 7. Podophyllum hexandrum 8. Rauwolfia serpentina 9. Rhodiola imbricata 10. Saussurea lappa 11. Stevia rebaudiana 12. Swertia chirayita 13. Trillium govanianum 14. Valeriana jatamansi 15. Withania somnifera 16. Zanthoxylum armatum

Authors

Nikhil Malhotra Postdoctoral Researcher, National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources Regional Station, Shimla, India. Dr. Nikhil Malhotra is an experienced molecular biologist having ~9 years of designing and performing experiments related to genomics, transcriptomics and metabolomics of high-value plant species with proven medicinal and nutraceutical potential. Owing to profound interest in Agricultural sciences, he also has been working on OMICS-assisted promotion of pseudocereals to recuperate global food security. He has utilized comparative genomics, metabolic & nutritional profiling along with NGS analysis to provide first time insights into molecular aspects of secondary metabolites biosynthesis and nutritional assessment of plethora of NW Himalayan plant species. In short research tenure, he has published several research articles in reputed international journals viz. Phytochemistry, Planta, Scientific Reports, Acta Physiologiae Plantarum, 3Biotech, PLoS ONE, Molecular Biology Reports, Applied Biochemistry & Biotechnology, Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, and Plant Breeding. Mohar Singh Principal Scientist, National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources Regional Station, Shimla, India. Dr Mohar Singh currently works as Principal Scientist (Plant Genetic Resources) at ICAR- National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources Regional Station, Shimla India. He received his PhD degree in Plant Breeding from Himachal Pradesh Agricultural University Palampur, India followed by DSc from Himachal Pradesh University Shimla India. He is working on genetic and genomic resources of pulses, pseudo cereals and cereals including their crop wild relatives and landraces foe diversity analysis using next generation technologies, which resulted into identi?cation of useful traits against nutritional and major biotic and abiotic stresses including agronomic improvement related characters, some which have been introgressed into the cultivated backgrounds for diversi?cation of cultivated gene pool. He has published more than 120 research papers in journals of national and international repute and also holds three textbooks and eight edited books to his credit published by Elsevier Insight, Academic Press and Springer, among others.