Tuberose (Polianthes tuberosa L.) belonging to family Amaryllidaceae is half hardy, perennial, bulbous plant. Bulbs are made of scales and leaf bases and stem remains concealed within scales. The generic name Polianthes is derived from Greek word “polios” meaning shining or white and “anthos” meaning flower, in allusion to the blooms of the common tuberose and species tuberosa, the plant being tuberous in nature. Tuberose is commercially cultivated in tropical and sub tropical areas for cut and loose flower trade and also for the extraction of it’s highly valued natural flower oil.
ORIGIN AND DISTRIBUTION
Tuberose is a native of Mexico (Bailey, 1976) from where it spread to different parts of world during 16th century. The name tuberose is derived from tuberosa, this plant being the tuberous hyacinth as distinguished from the bulbous hyacinth. The name therefore, is tuber-ose, not tuberose. By the middle of the 18th century the tuberose was still referred for as Hyacinthus indicus tuberosus. Originally Linnaeus had used the name Polianthes floribus alternis in his Hortus Cliffortianus. Later it was grouped under the genus Polianthes and the species tuberosa.
Tuberose is cultivated on large scale in China, Egypt, France, Italy, Israel, South Africa, New Zealand, Spain, Sri Lanka, North Carolina, USA and in many tropical and subtropical countries.
In India tuberose is commonly known as Gulchari and Gulshabbo in Hindi, Rajanigandha in Bengali, Sukandaraji and Nelasampengi in Telegu, Nilasampangi in Tamil and as Sugandharaja in Kannada.
In India its commercial cultivations is confined to Bagnen, Midnapur, Krishnanagar, Ranaghat, Kolaghat and Pariskura in West Bengal, Guwahati and Jorhat in Assam, Pune, Thane, Sangli, Nasik and Ahmednagar in Maharastra, Udaipur, Ajmer and Jaipur in Rajasthan, Navsari and Valsad in Gujrat, Ambala, Gurgaon and Faridabad in Haryana, Ludhiana and Patiala in Punjab, Devanahalli, Tumkur, Kolar, Belgaum and Mysore in Karnataka, East Godavari, Guntur, Chitoor and Krishna district in Andhra Pradesh and Coimbatore and Madurai in Tamil Nadu. Growers of Uttar Pradesh, Delhi and Orissa are also concentrating in tuberose cultivation after evolvement of improved varieties namely Shringar, Suvasini, Prajwal and Vaibhav by Indian breeders (Singh, 2006).