NEW DELHI: Ninety three per cent of wild medicinal plants used  for making ayurvedic medicines in the country are endangered and the government is  trying to relocate them from their usual habitat to protect them. 
The  threat to the plants came to the fore in an assessment exercise in different  states carried out by the Botanical Survey of India. 
The assessments  were done for a total of 359 prioritized wild medicinal plant species. Out of this, 335 have been assigned  Red List status ranging from critically endangered, endangered, vulnerable to  near-threatened. 
In addition, a total of 15 such species recorded in  trade have been found threatened, officials in the health ministry's Ayush  department said. 
Some of the rare plants reported to be threatened, have  been relocated during the last decade, including Utleria Salicifolia and  Hydnocarpus Pentandra in Western Ghats, Gymnocladus Assamicus and Begonia  Tessaricarpa from Arunachal Pradesh and Agapetes Smithiana in Sikkim.  
The assessments have involved conducting Conservation Assessment and Management  Prioritisation using International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural  Resources (IUCN) Red List Categories. 
The officials said the medicinal  plant resources in the country are threatened by over exploitation to meet the  demand of herbal industries. 
As per the information received from the  Ministry of Environment and Forests, about 95 per cent of such  plants are harvested from the wild, primarily from forests. 
The National  Medicinal Plants Board constituted in November 2000, has been implementing a  Central sector scheme for development and cultivation of medicinal plants since  2000-01. 
This scheme was revised and renamed as "Central Sector Scheme  for Conservation, Development and Sustainable Management of Medicinal Plants"  during 2008-09. 
States forest departments have been given assistance for  protection and propagation of such endangered species, especially used by the  herbal industries. 
Projects for setting up of 29 Medicinal Plants  Conservation Areas (MPCAs) have also been implemented in the states covering  mainly the medicinal plants viz Asoka, Guggal and Dashmool varieties.  
The scheme is being implemented with an outlay of Rs 321.30 crore during  the 11th Plan. 
In addition, a new "Centrally Sponsored Scheme of  National Mission on Medicinal Plants" with a total outlay of Rs 630 crore is  being implemented since 2008-09 by National Medicinal Plants Board. A total of  24 states have been covered under the scheme.
 

 
 
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