Elephant's Foot

Elephantopus scaber L.

Asteraceae

Location in our garden

Principal

Synonym

Elephantopus sinuatus Zoll. & Moritzi

Asterocephalus cochinchinensis Spreng.

Scabiosa cochinchinensis Lour.

Habitus

Herbaceous. A herbaceous undergrowth, erect, rigid, erect, hairy up to 80 cm high.

Part Used

  • Leaves
  • Flowers
  • Roots
  • Twigs

Growing Requirements

  • Full Sunshine
  • High Rainfall

Habitat

  • Forest
  • Roadside
  • Grassland

Overview

Elephant's foot native habitat is damp montane forests in subtropical or tropical climates. Tropical Africa, Eastern Asia, the Indian Subcontinent, Southeast Asia, and Australia are all home to the plant. The plant is traditionally used to treat numerous health issues. 

Vernacular Names

Tapak Liman (Indonesia), Gojivha or Hastipadi (Sanskrit), Gobhi (Hindi), Didancao (China).

Agroecology

The plant may be found in shaded or open areas such as grasslands, wasteland, roadside, fields, and forest margins at up to 1.500 m elevation.

Morphology

  • Stem - forked and stiff.
  • Leaves - mostly emerge from the basal rosette, oblong-ovate to oblong-lance, often with a notch on the margins
  • Flowers - Flower heads many and comprised of up to 4 purple flowers, flower heads are clustered terminally at the branches end, ussualy enclosed by 3 leaf-like bracts. 
  • Fruits - achenes, ribbed, pappus with rigid bristles.

Cultivation

  • Generatively propagate through seed.

Chemical Constituents

Sesquiterpene lactones, triterpenoids, steroids and their glycosides, flavonoids, phenolic compounds, long-chain hydrocarbons, essential oils. The essential oil is reported to contain numerous compounds such as hexadecanoic acid, isopropyl dimethyl tetrahydronaphthalenol, cyclosativene, copaene, zingiberene, phytol and octadecadienoic acid and other compounds. 

Traditional Medicinal Uses

Leaves, roots and whole plant of the Elephant's foot are traditionally used to treat numerous health problems such as menstrual-related complaints, cold, headache, cough, diabetes, hepatitis, tuberculosis, gastrovascular and cardiovascular complaints, filariasis and other illnesses. The plants parts may also be applied externally as antiseptic treat wound and anti-venom. The plant also serves as a tonic, antipyretic, diuretic, antibiotics,

Part Used

Reference Sources

Hiradeve, S.M. and Rangari, V.D., 2014. Elephantopus scaber Linn.: A review on its ethnomedical, phytochemical and pharmacological profile. Journal of applied biomedicine12(2), pp.49-61.

Kabiru, A. and Por, L.Y., 2013. Elephantopus species: traditional uses, pharmacological actions and chemical composition. Advances in Life Science and Technology15(1), pp.6-13.

Tropical Plants Database, Ken Fern. tropical.theferns.info. 2021-10-29. <tropical.theferns.info/viewtropical.php?id=Elephantopus+scaber>