A Synoptic Account of Flora of Solapur District, Maharashtra (India)

Abstract The present paper provides the first systematic and comprehensive account of the flora of Solapur district of Maharashtra (India). The flora of this region demonstrates a wide range of species diversity and growth forms. The vegetation of the district mainly represents tropical dry deciduous forests, thorny open scrub and vast grasslands. During the present work, a total of 1441 taxa belonging to 699 genera and 125 families of flowering plants were recorded. A new species Crinum solapurense Gaikwad et al. is described. Fabaceae is the dominant family with 210 taxa, followed by Poaceae (157 taxa), Asteraceae (85 taxa), Malvaceae (68 taxa) and Euphorbiaceae (48 taxa). Acacia is the largest genus with 25 taxa, followed by Euphorbia (23), Cyperus (22), Crotalaria (19) and Ipomoea (19). The herbaceous flora of the district is notable as it amounts to 56.21% of the whole of flora. The ratio of indigenous woody to herbaceous components is 1:1.28. The proportion of indigenous taxa (978) to the cultivated ones (460) is 1.35: 0.5 in the district.


Introduction
The Solapur district in India is named after its town headquarter 'Solapur' believed to be derived from two words 'sola' meaning sixteen and 'pur' meaning village. The district is predominantly an agrarian tract endowed with a variety of natural resources in the plains of Bhima, Sina and Man Rivers. The climate of the district, in general is dry and extreme. The vegetation is divided into tropical dry deciduous forests (Champion and Seth 1968), the open scrub forests and vast grasslands. The dry deciduous forests and thorny scrub forests play a vital role in the local ecosystem by performing many ecological functions such as ground-water recharge, flood control, retention of nutrients and sediments, and provide habitat for a large number of birds, insects, mammals, reptiles, spiders and microbes. The grasslands of the district are unique and popularly known as Indian Savannas, famous for bird diversity. A hundreds of bird species including a critically endangered Indian Bustard (Ardeotis nigriceps) inhabit in these grasslands. Thus, Solapur district is rich in biological diversity but remains rather neglected with regard to its plant wealth.
In Maharashtra, the recorded history suggests that the plant taxonomists were attracted by the forests of Western Ghats. Surprisingly, none had shown any interest in the plants of drought prone region of Maharashtra in general and of Solapur district in particular. There is absolutely no plant collections for the Solapur district anywhere. The botanical exploration in the district remained rather neglected. In spite of high plant diversity and luxuriant vegetation, stray references are found to the plants of the district in well known floras such as 'Bombay Flora' (Dalzell and Gibson 1861) 'Flora of the Presidency of Bombay' (Cooke 1908) and 'Forest Flora of Bombay Presidency and Sind' (Talbot 1909, Talbot 1911. Further, these collections do not precisely indicate the localities. In addition in many cases important field notes are lacking. Much of these collections are hardly available in Indian herbaria such as BSI, BLAT, CAL etc. Though State floras like Flora of Maharashtra by Almeida (1996), Almeida (1998), Almeida (2001a), Almeida (2001b), Almeida (2003a), Almeida (2003b), Almeida (2009a) and Almeida (2009b); BSI's Flora of Maharashtra State: monocotyledons by Lakshminarasimhan (1996) and Flora of Maharashtra State: dicotyledons by Singh and Karthikeyan (2000), Singh and Karthikeyan (2001), had been published, they are not directly connected with the flora of Solapur district as they dealt with Maharashtra State of which Solapur district happens to be part. Further, there are a few scattered publications on the plants of Solapur district (e.g. Hemadri 1970;Pathak 2006;Dalave et al. 2010;Suryavanshi and Bachaulkar 2011;Tembhurne and Nanir 2012;Das Das and Singh 2012;Gaikwad et al. 2014;Gaikwad et al. 2014a), which are far from satisfactory. Hence, the present work was necessary to get a comprehensive and dependable floristic survey of Solapur district.

Study area
The district of Solapur lies between 17°10' N -18°32' N and 74°42' E -76°15' E. The district is fairly well defined to its west as well as to its east by the inward-looking scarps of Phaltan Range and the Osmanabad Plateau respectively. Though of an irregular shape, the district is roughly square, 200 km east -west and 150 km north -south. The district has a total area of 14,844.6 sq km and it is divided into eleven-revenue tahsils (Fig. 1). The district is about 550 m above mean sea level. The entire district has the rock type composed of basaltic lava-flows, which erupted in the Cretaceous-Eocene age and a popularly known as Deccan traps (Pathak 2006). The presence of thin mantle of black cotton soil almost everywhere on basalts, river alluvium, sands, gravels, slits and clays represent recent deposits. Calcareous concretions and nodules commonly found in the soil are concentrated near stream courses. The chief rivers of the district are the Bhima, its leftbank feeder the Sina and its right-bank feeders the Nira and the Man. Besides, a good number of lesser streams form the tributaries of the Bhima and serve as its local feeders. The climate of Solapur district is overall agreeable and characterized by general dryness in the major part of the year. The rainfall in the district varies from 448.8 mm (17.67") to 689.2 mm (27.14"). The rainfall during the south-west monsoon in the months of June to September amounts to about 74% of the annual rainfall. September is the rainiest month. The whole district experiences extremes of climate with temperature going down to 5°C in winter and rising up to 45°C in summer. The air is highly humid from June to September (monsoon season) and mostly dries during the rest of the year. The driest part of the year is from March to May when the humidity is between about 20 and 25% on the average in the afternoons. The climate of the region supports the vegetation that can be conveniently divided into tropical dry deciduous forests, thorny forests and vast tracts of grasslands (Champion and Seth 1968;Dikshit 2001). A population of the district is 43, 17,756 (as per 2011 Census), which constitute 3.84% of the State figures.

Materials and methods
During the period of five years i.e. from 2009 to 2013, field visits of 2-3 days duration were undertaken to collect plants from selected localities. During the present study, a total of 1441 field numbers comprising about 4467 specimens were collected and deposited in the Herbarium of Walchand College of Arts and Science, Solapur (MS), India. While carrying out the floristic survey, every effort was made to collect the plants in all three seasons viz. pre-monsoon (April-May), monsoon (June-September) and post-monsoon (October-March). Special attention was paid to under or unexplored remote areas of the district. In addition to the collection of wild plants, the efforts were made to collect weeds, which cover a wide range of ecological habitats. Cultivated plants have also been collected as the work was undertaken to study the flora of the district. All the collected specimens processed for drying by using regular drying method with blotting papers and newspapers (Santapau 1955, Jain and Rao 1960, Rao and Sharma 1990. Most of the specimens and field identifications confirmed satisfactorily with the help of available literature (Chakravarty 1982, Sanjappa 1991, Sharma and Balakrishnan 1993, Sharma and Sanjappa 1993, Sharma et al. 1993, Hajra et al. 1995a, Hajra et al. 1995b, Cook 1996, Almeida 1996, Almeida 1998, Almeida 2001a, Almeida 2001b, Almeida 2003a, Almeida 2003b, Almeida 2009a, Almeida 2009b, Naik 1998, Jagtap and Singh 1999, Singh and Karthikeyan 2000, Singh and Karthikeyan 2001, Mishra and Singh 2001, Singh 2001a, Singh 2001b  Most of the talukas except some part of Barshi taluka depict thorny scrub forest; the barren hills of this area should be afforested with deciduous elements, which are wild, indigenous and adaptable to dry climate. Solapur district has the forest area about 0.94% (Pathak 2006) of the total area i.e. about 21.06% less than the minimum requirement (22%), indicating how fast the deterioration of forest has taken place. If the destruction of the vegetation is not checked at this crucial juncture, then it is certainly heading towards natural calamities like drought and flood. The heavy grazing and anthropogenic activities along with uneven pattern of rainfall and frequent droughts for successive years are major causes for deterioration of forest in the district.
In conclusion, therefore, it may be said that the district has a far better potential of plant wealth than was supposed earlier and needs a further careful investigation.

Discussion
The plants of Solapur district shows wide range of species diversity and growth forms (  Tables 1, 2, 7). The herbaceous flora of the district is notable as it amounts to 56.21% of the whole flora. A total of 1441 species including infraspecific taxa distributed over 14,844.6 sq km area reveal a relatively high species density (0.096) when compared with the figure given for adjoining Ahmednagar district (0.061) by (Pradhan and Singh 1999). Therefore, it may be said that Solapur district rich in its plant wealth.  Table 1.
List of families with number of genera and species including infraspecific taxa.   Table 3.
Showing comparative account of taxa reported in different taxonomic works on Maharashtra State and Solapur district (Note: The figure in the parenthesis indicates account of the Bombay State including Maharashtra, Karnataka and Gujarat, Baluchistan and some part of Rajasthan). Table 4.
Showing ten dominant families in the order of dominance. The total number of species (including subspecies, varieties and forma) reported for Maharashtra as on to-day is 3191 (Table 3). For Solapur district, the number of taxa works out to be 1441. Therefore, percentage of flora of Solapur district out of whole flora of Maharashtra will be 45.15.
To evaluate the dominant ten families a comparison has been made between major floras of the Maharashtra State such as 'The Flora of the Presidency of Bombay' (Cooke 1908), 'Flora of Maharashtra: monocotyledons' (Lakshminarasimhan 1996), 'Flora of Marathwada' (Naik 1998), 'Flora of Maharashtra: dicotyledons' (Singh andKarthikeyan 2000, Singh andKarthikeyan 2001) and Flora of Solapur district (present work). The Family Fabaceae including three sub-families viz. Papilionoideae, Caesalpinoideae and Table 6.
List of top twenty genera represented by higher number of species in the flora of Solapur district. Table 7.
Showing analysis of life forms of indigenous taxa.
Mimosoideae taken as a single combined family Leguminosae (Fabaceae), as done by Hooker in his Flora of British India, then that family stands first in the list with 66 genera and 210 species and Solanaceae (12:33) finds tenth place in the list of dominant families (  Table 4). This order of dominance, when compared with above-mentioned three floras, it roughly corresponds to the Flora of Marathwada (Table 5). In both floras, same nine families find a place, of-course, with varying positions. Rubiaceae, which occupies the nineth position, fails to find a place amongst the ten dominant families in Flora Solapur district; on the other hand the family Solanaceae and Apocynaceae which occupy tenth and seventh position in Solapur district could not find a place anywhere among the top ten families in Flora of Marathwada. Further, Asteraceae and Euphorbiaceae are occupied at same positions in the both floras. While, Fabaceae and Poaceae are occupy top positions. These facts indicate more or less similar climatic and edaphic situations in Marathwada region and Solapur district.
The family Fabaceae shares maximum number of prominent genera whereas other families except Cyperaceae have only one prominent genus each (Table 6). In contrast to these prominent genera, there are about 416 genera represented by only one species.
The ratio of indigenous woody (631 taxa) to herbaceous (810 taxa) components is 1:1.28 and that of monocots (244 indigenous taxa) to Magnolids and eudicots (734 indigenous taxa) is 1:3 (Table 7). The floristic spectrum of the district shows very low percentage of phanerophytes and a very high percentage of therophytes. It clearly indicates the drier climatic conditions together with other biological influence (Fig. 5).
In the present floristic work, the commonly cultivated species are also included in addition to indigenous ones. The proportion of indigenous taxa (978) to the cultivated ones (460) is 1.35:0.5 (Fig. 6). This high proportion of cultivated species cannot be neglected as it forms the major component of urban flora in particular.