Documentation of Dye Yielding Plants in Ballari District, Karnataka


Authors : M. Siddeshwari; K. Varshitha

Volume/Issue : Volume 9 - 2024, Issue 7 - July


Google Scholar : https://tinyurl.com/mrd34dmx

Scribd : https://tinyurl.com/42sbbw4t

DOI : https://doi.org/10.38124/ijisrt/IJISRT24JUL1534

Note : A published paper may take 4-5 working days from the publication date to appear in PlumX Metrics, Semantic Scholar, and ResearchGate.


Abstract : The present research carried out survey on dye yielding plants of Ballari district, Karnataka from JAN-JULY (2023-24). Enumerated total 40 dye yielding plants belonging to 33 genera and 20 families, along with their vernacular name, habit, part used. Among plant families Fabaceae is dominant with 10 species followed by Combretaceae with 5 species and Asteraceae with 3 species emerged as three dominant families. The dye yielding plants were extracted by using various techniques. The study identified and extracted natural dyes from various plant sources.

Keywords : Natural Dyes, Floristic Diversity, Ballari District, Bio-Diversity Conservation.

References :

  1. Parisara, N., & Kiran, B. R. (2016). A Preliminary Study on Dye Yielding Plants of Bhadravathi Taluk, Karnataka. International Journal of Scientific Research in Science, Engineering and Technology2, 86-89.
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  3. Siva, R. (2007). Status of natural dyes and dye-yielding plants in India. Current science, 916-925.
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  14. Nidhi, J., & Nitan, K. K. (2014). Herbal dye yielding plants of District Kathua, Jammu and Kashmir state, India. International Research Journal of Biological Sciences3(12), 73-79.
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The present research carried out survey on dye yielding plants of Ballari district, Karnataka from JAN-JULY (2023-24). Enumerated total 40 dye yielding plants belonging to 33 genera and 20 families, along with their vernacular name, habit, part used. Among plant families Fabaceae is dominant with 10 species followed by Combretaceae with 5 species and Asteraceae with 3 species emerged as three dominant families. The dye yielding plants were extracted by using various techniques. The study identified and extracted natural dyes from various plant sources.

Keywords : Natural Dyes, Floristic Diversity, Ballari District, Bio-Diversity Conservation.

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