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Chandra Prakash Kala

Researcher at Indian Institute of Forest Management

Publications -  89
Citations -  3417

Chandra Prakash Kala is an academic researcher from Indian Institute of Forest Management. The author has contributed to research in topics: Traditional knowledge & Agriculture. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 79 publications receiving 2932 citations. Previous affiliations of Chandra Prakash Kala include Wildlife Institute of India & Government of India.

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Developing the medicinal plants sector in northern India: challenges and opportunities

TL;DR: The major objectives were to explore the potential in medicinal plants resources, to understand the challenges and opportunities with the medicinal plants sector, and to suggest recommendations based upon the present state of knowledge for the establishment and smooth functioning of the medicinal Plants sector along with improving the living standards of the underprivileged communities.
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Ethnomedicinal botany of the Apatani in the Eastern Himalayan region of India.

TL;DR: The wealth of medicinal plants used by the Apatani tribe of Arunachal Pradesh are investigated, finding that about 52 types of ailments were cured by using these 158 medicinal plant species.
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Indigenous Uses, Population Density, and Conservation of Threatened Medicinal Plants in Protected Areas of the Indian Himalayas

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors monitored the population density of threatened medicinal plant species in seven protected areas in the Indian Himalayas and documented the indigenous uses of these plants through interviews with 138 herbal healers (83 Tibetan healers and 55 Ayurvedic healers).
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Status and conservation of rare and endangered medicinal plants in the Indian trans-Himalaya

TL;DR: In this paper, the distribution pattern, population structure and conservation status of rare and endangered medicinal plant species in Spiti sub-division of Himachal Pradesh in the Indian trans-Himalaya were studied.
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Prioritization of medicinal plants on the basis of available knowledge, existing practices and use value status in Uttaranchal, India

TL;DR: It was found that herbs contributed the highest number of medicinal plants (65%), followed by shrubs and trees (16%), and the maximum number of plant species were used to cure generalized body aches and colic, followed by gastrointestinal and dermatological problems.