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The wildlife of the Lahore District of Pakistan includes a diverse range of natural and cultivated flora and fauna. The introduced flora of the city of Lahore comes from its cultural heritage as the regional capital of various Indian kingdoms from the 11th century to the early 20th century. Much of the Indian flora was introduced during the reign of Akbar, the third Mughal emperor. ==Flora== Common trees of Lahore include: *''Alstonia scholaris'' - locally termed ditabark - native to South Asia *''Bombax malabaricum''- locally termed sunbal or silk cotton tree - native to the Himalayas *''Callistemon citrinus'' - locally termed bottle brush - native to Australia *''Dalbergia sissoo'' - locally termed shisham - native to South Asia *''Delonix regia'' - locally termed gulmohar - native to Madagascar *''Erythrina suberosa'' - locally termed coral or gul nister - native to Burma *''Ficus benghalensis'' - locally termed banyan - native to Bangladesh *''Ficus religiosa'' - locally termed pipal - native to South Asia *''Ficus retusa'' - locally termed bobari - native to Malaysia *''Kigelia pinnata'' - locally termed gul-e-fanoos or sausage - native to Africa *''Livistona chinensis'' - locally termed bottle palm - native to China *''Mangifera indica'' - locally termed aam - native to South Asia *''Mimusops elengi'' - locally termed molsery - native to South Asia *''Pongamia pinnata'' - locally termed sukh chayn or Indian beech - native to Himalayas *''Syzygium cumini'' - locally termed jamu - native to South Asia *''Ziziphus zizyphus'' - locally termed jujube - native to Himalayas〔(Lahore Gardening )〕〔(Fungus flora of Lahore )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Wildlife of Lahore District」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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