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Vegetative Composition Survey of Yaba College of Technology, Epe Campus, Lagos, South-Western, Nigeria

H. O. Rosulu, T. I. Hassan, O. E. Areo, M. Ginikanwa and I. E. Akpan
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H. O. Rosulu: Department of Agricultural Technology, Yaba College of Technology, Nigeria
T. I. Hassan: Department of Agricultural Technology, Yaba College of Technology, Nigeria
O. E. Areo: Department of Agricultural Technology, Yaba College of Technology, Nigeria
M. Ginikanwa: Department of Agricultural Technology, Yaba College of Technology, Nigeria
I. E. Akpan: Department of Agricultural Technology, Yaba College of Technology, Nigeria

International Journal of Research and Scientific Innovation, 2020, vol. 7, issue 6, 16-24

Abstract: A survey was conducted on 54 ha of land in 2017at Yaba College of Technology, Odoragushin, Epe Campus, Lagos, Western Nigeria for their vegetative composition. The land was before now used for arable cropping and abandoned to fallow for more than a decade. The fallow land was sub-divided into 16 different transects run with a base line, each measuring 100m x 100m. Collection of data was done using belt method for plant taxonomy (forms), ecological status, habitat, species frequency/diversity and ethno-botanical values. Altogether, 83 plants represented by 45 families were encountered with 82 different medicinal plants, shrubs being the highest with 22 species, while epiphyte, fern and palm had specie. For taxonomy and frequency distribution of plant families, Euphorbiaceae and Poaceae had the highest number of plant species occurrence of 6 each while Caealpiniondeae and Mimosoideae had 4 occurences. On the basis of life forms, plants were classified into shrubs, herbs, trees, climbers, palms, fern and epiphyte with shrub having the highest relative density of 36.14% with palm, epiphyte and fern respectively having the lowest relative density of 1.20%. Product collected from these plants have varying uses categorized as edible leafy vegetables, non-edible leaves, flowers, chew stick, firewood and timber as well as medicinal uses, such as treatment of pile, gonorrhoea, malaria and curing infertility problems. It is hereby recommended that conservation efforts should be undertaken through the establishment of botanical gardens, sanctuaries, rare breed centres, gene banks and on-site gene banks as well as equipped herbarium.

Date: 2020
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