TL;DR: All the extracts showed strong antioxidant activity comparable with or higher that of alpha-tocopherol, and the antimicrobial activity of most of the extracts was antibacterial.
TL;DR: The results of this experimental study indicated that costunolide possessed normo-glycemic and hypolipidemic activity and hence it could be used as a drug for treating diabetes.
TL;DR: The results indicated for the first time the protective effect of costunolide and eremanthin from oxidative stress, thus opening the way for their use in medication.
TL;DR: Hexane extract of C.speciosus showed promising antibacterial and antifungal activity and two sesquiterpenoid compounds were isolated (costunolide and eremanthin) from the hexane extract, both of which inhibited the tested fungi.
Abstract: Background
Costus speciosus (Koen ex.Retz.) Sm (Costaceae) is an Indian ornamental plant which has long been used medicinally in traditional systems of medicine. The plant has been found to possess diverse pharmacological activities. Rhizomes are used to treat pneumonia, rheumatism, dropsy, urinary diseases, jaundice, skin diseases and leaves are usedto treat mental disorders.
TL;DR: These studies indicate that crossing barriers prevent potentially maladaptive hybridization and effectively reinforce the speciation process, adding to mounting evidence for reinforcement from animal studies and showing that plant speciation may also involve complex mate recognition systems.
Abstract: The importance of reinforcement, that is, natural selection that strengthens reproductive isolation between incipient species, remains controversial. We used two approaches to test for reinforcement in a species radiation of Neotropical gingers in the genus Costus. First, we conducted an intensive study of Costus pulverulentus and Costus scaber, two recently diverged species that co-occur and share hummingbird pollinators. The hummingbird pollinators transfer pollen between these Costus species, but hybrids are rarely found in nature. By performing pollinations between populations of C. pulverulentus and C. scaber from three sites across the species' geographic ranges, we find that pollen-pistil incompatibilities acting prior to fertilization have evolved only between locally sympatric populations, whereas geographically distant populations within the region of sympatry and allopatric populations remain fully interfertile. Second, we conducted a comparative study of isolating mechanisms across the genus. We find lower seed set due to pollen-pistil incompatibility between species pairs that co-occur and experience pollen transfer in nature compared to species pairs that are otherwise isolated, regardless of genetic distance. Taken together, these studies indicate that crossing barriers prevent potentially maladaptive hybridization and effectively reinforce the speciation process. Our results add to mounting evidence for reinforcement from animal studies and show that plant speciation may also involve complex mate recognition systems. Reinforcement may be particularly important in rapidly diverging lineages where ecological factors play a primary role in reproductive isolation, as may often be the case in tropical communities.