Online Medicinal And Aromatic Plants Journals

Aromatic plants are prominent for domestic and commercial adoption. Simultaneously they are called medicinal and aromatic plants. Many of the MAPs are matured under forest cover and are shade tolerant, agroforestry attempt a convenient strategy for cooperating their cultivation and conservation. Several contacts are feasible: integrating shade tolerant MAPs as lower strata species in multistrata systems; cultivating short cycle MAPs as intercrops in existing stands of plant-ation tree-crops and new forest plantations; growing medicinal trees as shade providers, boundary markers, and on conservation structures; interplanting MAPs with food crops; involving them in social forestry programs; then on. The growing demand for MAPs makes them remunerative alternative crops to the normal ones for smallholders within the tropics. Being overburdened species with auspicious potential, the MAPs require research scrutiny on a good cluster of topics starting from propagation methods to harvesting and processing techniques, and germplasm collection and genetic improvement to internal control and market trends. Forests are the first source of medicinal plants, and MAPs are one among the various valuable categories of nontimber forest products (NTFPs) that include food and beverages, fodder, perfumes, cosmetics, fibre, gums, resins, and ornamentals and materials for dyeing and tanning, plant protection, utensils and handicrafts.    

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