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FEBRUARY
1994
168
JOURNAL
OF THE
TREE
SOCIETY OF ZIMBABWE
P.O BOX 2128
HARARE
TREE LIFE
As predicted at the AGM last May, due to increases in postage and printing
costs, it has regrettably become necessary to increase our annual subs
to $25 with effect from April 1994.
MASHONALAND CALENDAR
Tuesday 1st February. Presentation to Mr. Bob
We are combining with the staff of the Herbarium to make a presentation
to Mr. Bob Drummond at 4 p.m. at the Herbarium in the Botanic Garden.
While tea is served there will be an opportunity for members to chat to
Bob. Contributions of cakes or the occasion will be much appreciated.
Sunday 20th February. We are pleased to be re-visiting one of our favourite
haunts in Chegutu – Ijapo Farm, as guests of Brian and Kerry Welburg.
This is a wonderful spot on the Mupfure River full of botanic interest.
We look forward to meeting our Chegutu members and friends again. Directions:
take the Bulawayo Road and as you approach Chegutu just beyond Doddhill
Nursery turn right onto the Chinhoyi Road. Proceed down this road for
11.5 km, turn left onto Black Adder Road and continue along this gravel
road for 14 km to the house signposted Brian and Kerry. Total distance
from Harare is about 125 km and 1.45 hours travelling time. Brian and
Kerry have kindly offered to serve tea at 9.15 before we walk down to
the river and gorge.
Saturday 26th February. Botanic Interest Walk. The Blatherwick Avenue
entrance to the Mukuvisi Woodland at 3.00 p.m. Take Chiremba Road (Widdecombe);
turn left into Longford, & left at the circle to Blatherwick Avenue.
Tuesday 1st March. Botanic Garden Walk
Sunday 20th March. Possibly to the Enterprise area, but to be confirmed
Saturday 26th March. Botanic Interest Walk
MATABELELAND CALENDAR
February 4th – 6th. At Gwayi River. We will have contacted you by
now about the details if you are coming.
Sunday 20th February. This is an extra, which we would like to put in
the calendar, to give an outing for those who will not be going to Gwayi.
There is still so much more to see at Roy Stevens' property, especially
after this good rainy season, that we have asked if we could return. He
has kindly agreed to our request so we will leave Girls' College car park
at 8.30. Please prepare for an all-day trip.
Sunday 6th March. North of Bulawayo in the Insiza area to the Brownlee-Walkers.
Details next month.
April 1st Easter. West Nicholson area for Easter. Will anyone in Harare
be interested, if you are please, phone Maureen Silva-Jones on 739711
so that accommodation can be arranged?
The Urban Trail. After three years at the Hillside Dams I feel we have
more or less exhausted the potential of the area, in terms of my own limited
expertise, and I feel it is perhaps time to move on to new things. With
this in mind I am also thinking of a new time, a new venue and a new voice
and therefore float the following ideas for: -
a) Venue – the Circular Drive area
b) Time – the second Saturday or Sunday of the month at 9 a.m.
c) Subjects – succulents, annuals and grasses.
Please let me know your feelings. So there will be no Hillside Dam walk
in February.
Saturday 1st January 1994: The Annual New Years' Day Social in Bulawayo
For the second year Doc and Mary Raub opened their lovely home in Khumalo
to us and for this, their generosity and warm hospitality we thank them
most sincerely.
The violent squall that interrupted our pre-lunch drinks sent one and
all scurrying for shelter on the wide verandah, but otherwise failed to
quench the jolly spirit of the occasion. We thank Angela Sykes, Mary Raub
and Margaret McCausland for coordinating the event and laying the foundations
for a very successful party.
Sunday 2nd January.
A glorious morning dawned for our trip to Roy Stephen's Shumba Shava Mkulu
farm, nestling in the eastern Matobo. This unique area is one of the most
consistently high areas in Matabeleland, with the granite kopjies rising
to over 5000 ft and then swooping down to the Umzingwane and Mtshabezi
valleys. The rainfall is above average as it is driven onto the sheer
rock faces and winter mists and heavy dews are not uncommon. These wet
conditions create unusual microclimates and perfect niches for a wide
variety of plants and there are many sponges, vleis and perennial streams
on the farm. Shumba Shava Mkulu is home to breeding pairs of Peregrine
falcons, Black-breasted and Brown snake eagles, migrant Wahlberg’s
eagles and Yellow-billed Kites. The persistent calls of the Red-chested
cuckoo and Rufous-naped lark were heard all day long.
A leisurely walk up a granite dwala revealed a spectacular view, a remnant
gravesite from a bygone era, Faurea saligna in blossom, Ficus abutilifolia,
Canthium lactescens, Brachylaena rotundata, Maytenus heterophylla and
some earnest discussion on Elephantorrhiza sp. by the more learned amongst
us!
An interesting and scenic walk, winding through perennial streams, sponges
and woodlands was a botanists ' delight. Among the most unusual trees
noted were Ficus verruculosa growing very close to a Halleria lucida (very
rare indeed), Turraea obtusifolia with its lovely honeysuckle white flowers
and quite unlike Turraea nilotica, Boscia angustifolia and Calodendrum
capense in magnificent pink flower. A superb Albizia tanganyicensis with
its orange bark, Catha edulis (used prodigiously by the Somalis and Kenyans
as a narcotic). Clerodendrum myricoides in pretty blue blossom, Euphorbia
matabelensis, Heteropyxis dehniae, Olea europaea, Pavetta eylesii, Pittosporum
viridiflorum, Protea gaguedi, Securidaca longipedunculata and Vepris reflexa
were also interesting finds.
Lunch was taken amid raindrops of a passing shower (Matopos recorded 70
mm in parts) and followed by a walk into a vlei area to look at wild flowers.
Anacampseros rhodesiaca with its fragile pink and white flowers, Moraea
sp., scarlet pimpernels, orchids, irises, yellow stars, stud thorns and
African foxgloves added colour and beauty to a wonderful day.
Our sincere thanks to Roy Stevens for his hospitality and generosity and
for sharing his intimate knowledge and enthusiasm of the Matobo.
Sharon Brennan
THORA’S HERBAL HINTS
Lavender Scented leaves.
1. LAVENDER – Lavendula spica (Lavendula officinalis) and Lavendula
dentata.
These herbs look good in the garden and smell divine. For thousands of
years they have been used not only for their fragrance but also as a disinfectant,
vulnerary, sedative, stimulant, tonic and carminative. The Romans used
lavender in their bath water (its name in fact derives from the Latin
lavare – to wash), satchels of lavender were placed in chests and
cupboards and lavender oil was brushed on bed¬steads to get rid of
bugs and rubbed into children’s hair to kill lice.
A dog if bitten by a viper was rubbed with a handful of lavender to save
its life – the essential oil is a powerful antiseptic and a remarkable
neutralizing agent of venom. In the 16th Century laundry women dried their
washing on lavender hedges and lavender water was always sprinkled on
washing before ironing. How lovely!
It is the flowering tips, picked before fully in bloom, that form the
basis of various preparations. A mild infusion is sedative and anti-spasmodic
and therefore prescribed for disorders of a nervous origin – insomnia,
poor digestion, migraines and irritability.
A stronger infusion is stimulant, sudorific, tonic, disinfectant and diuretic.
Can be prescribed for laryngitis, bronchitis, whooping cough, asthma,
chills, influenza and feverishness.
Lavender oil can be made by macerating a handful of fresh flowers in a
litre of olive oil in a transparent jar in the sun for three days. Strain
and press, then repeat the operation till the required strength is reached.
I think Vitamin E oil works equally well and is excellent for the skin
and not quite as expensive. This oil can be used for migraines and headaches
rubbed on the forehead and taken internally – 6 drops on a lump
of sugar. Also a good remedy for vertigo and digestive disorders. The
lotion is good for burns, eczema and congestion of the lungs. Rubbed into
the hair it strengthens and cleans. Lavender is said to promote hair growth,
is an excellent rinse and a quick setting lotion. Use 2 cups lavender
flowers and leaves
10 cloves
2 litres of boiling water
Boil then strain.
Use this lotion in the bath as well. It is stimulating and acts as a deodorant.
Make a small lavender pillow to induce sleep – fill with dried flowers
and foam chips.
Lavender flowers and leaves chopped up and mixed, impart a special subtle
flavour to many sweet dishes, in tea, fruit drinks, cake icing, pancake
and sponge cake mixes.
This is equally true of the scented geranium leaves.
Try making lavender syrup – boiling flowers and sugar together then
adding it to your favourite ice cream recipe. Delicious!
All old woody stems of your lavender plants can be put in a tub and covered
with boiling water then allowed to cool in order to make, when strained,
a delightful fragrant foliar spray for your precious pot plants and garden
flowers and vegetables.
2. THE LAVENDER TREE – Heteropyxis dehniae
This tree was renamed in honour of Mrs. Gertrude Dehn who made extensive
studies of it in the Rusape and Marondera areas. It is a fragile dainty
tree, lovely at all times of the year and deserving an honoured place
in the garden.
African tribes have used it in herbal medicine and have also appreciated
its fragrant perfume.
A scented tea is made by pouring boiling water over the leaves and sterns,
and then strained to relieve heartburn, colic and flatulence. It is a
tonic tea, strengthening and reviving, given to old people, to refresh
weary travellers, and to help a new mother regain strength. It also aids
digestive upsets and colds.
A strong brew is used as a wash and deodorant – very good in the
bath – fragrant and invigorating.
Crushed leaves added to Vaseline treat cracked heels and dry skin on hands
and feet – relieve tiredness and soften calluses. Rubbed on to pillows,
the crushed leaves help to keep mosquitoes away. Dried and powdered leaves
are used as talc.
The leaves and twigs boiled make an excellent inhalant to clear the nose
and chest.
This brew is also used as a mouthwash for gum infections and toothache.
A strong brew is made to keep ticks off dogs and cattle, goats and donkeys,
and for treating bites and scratches on these animals. The dried leaves
make an excellent ingredient for potpourri.
3. LAVENDER CROTON – Croton gratissimus
The branches of this tree when crushed are pleasantly aromatic and are
dried and powdered by the Bushman ladies to make a perfume. The charred
bark is used to treat bleeding gums but this tree is believed to be toxic,
a Euphorbiaceae.
It is also known as the hairy lavender fever berry.
Palms
The palm tree, according to the Rev. E Cobham Brewer, LL.D (Dictionary
of Phrase and Fable, 1906) is said to grow faster for being weighted down.
Hence it is the symbol of resolution overcoming calamity. And there is
an Oriental legend that the palm tree sprang up from the residue of the
clay of which Adam was formed.
Palmy days are prosperous, happy days, as they were for the victorious
Roman gladiator who went to receive the palm branch as the reward for
his prowess.
Sad Palm Sunday, 29 March 1463, was the day of the battle of Towton (near
York), the bloodiest of all the battles in the War of the Roses, when
more than 37 000 Englishmen were killed.
The palms in all of these tales undoubtedly referred to the date palm,
Phoenix dactylifera, but there are more than 1110 species of palms in
the world and we saw a fair sample of them during the Botanic Garden walk
with Tom Muller on Tues. 7 December. A note on some other notable palms
in Harare might be of interest.
The well-known Washingtonia robusta in Julius Nyerere Way (formerly Kingsway)
seem to have got there more by accident than by design. The first decade
of this century saw a tremendous struggle by Salisbury's Town Engineer,
Mr. de la Poire Crawford Lindesay, to tame an unnamed stream that divided
the Kopjie section from the Causeway section. This he eventually achieved
by channelling the stream into an underground drain and building a dual
roadway above it with a four-metre boulevard in between, and the boulevard
was to be planted with linden trees for shade. What the linden trees were
is not clear, perhaps the English linden, Tilia x europaea (Tilia vulgaris),
and it is interesting to speculate on how well it would have done here.
The road was named Broadway, in keeping with its great width, but in November
1910 it was renamed Kingsway during the visit of the Duke and Duchess
of Connaught. On 27 January The Rhodesia Herald reported that tree planting
in Kingsway was going ahead and that convicts were preparing the holes
for the trees – presumably the lindens. There is no record of what
happened to these trees, but in the early 1920s H.E.V. Pickstone and Brother
Ltd., of South Africa, presented to the City Council the Washingtonia
palms that now grace Julius Nyerere Way. Fifty palms stand in the two-block
stretch between Baker and Samora Machel Avenues, but gaps left here and
there by missing palms suggest that as many as seventy might have been
planted originally.
Washingtonia robusta is a Mexican palm from Baja California and Sonora,
where it reaches heights of 25 metres or more. The closely related Washingtonia
filifera, from the United States is somewhat shorter, but with a thick
trunk of around one metre in diameter, it is a less popular ornamental
than the slender Mexican species.
There are 20 or more species of Livistona from tropical Asia and Australia.
The genus was named after Patrick Murray, Baron of Livistone, who founded
the Edinburgh Botanic Garden. One wonders why it was named Livistona and
not Livistonea. Both Livistona chinensis and Livistona australis are fairly
common in Harare but, sadly, one of the finest specimens of Livistona
australis in the City was removed a few years ago to make way for the
new offices of one of the parastatals.
Livistona australis comes from the east coast of Australia from the Victoria/New
South Wales border northwards to Fraser Island off Queensland. It reaches
heights of around 25 metres and diameters up to 35 cm. It is known as
cabbage-tree palm from the edible cabbage-like material at the apex of
the stem.
The pink-flowering palm that we saw is Archontophoenix cunninghamiana,
known in Australia as bungalow palm or picabeen palm, both bungalow and
picabeen being Aboriginal names. This palm has much the same natural range
as that of Livistona australis, perhaps extending a little further north
and not quite so far south. The wood of the trunk is very hard and heavy,
with a density of around 1000 kg per cubic metre, so it will just about
sink in water. The wood is used for small ornamental articles, inlay work,
walking sticks, umbrella handles, batons, etc.
Archontophoenix cunninghamiana is known outside Australia as the King
Palm, probably because of its regal appearance when full grown to its
mature height of 20 metres or so.
On his Zambezi expedition of 1858-1863 David Livingstone occasionally
used Borassus•aethiopum for firing the boilers of his steamboat.
He called the species Palmyra, the name for Borassus flabellifer from
India and Sri Lanka. Livingstone even left us a record of a measurement
of one specimen – his journal entry for 9 January 1859 reads; "Palmyra
75 ft. long, 19 inches diameter at two feet from the ground, 21 in. at
bulb." And on 10 August 1859: "Got three Palmyra trees, the
cutting up of which, into small pieces detained us till 1 p.m. and they
steamed us for three miles or to about a mile short of Shupanga house."
Borassus flabellifer is cultivated in India and Sri Lanka, and its uses
are legion; an old Tamil song lists 801 of them! Our word toddy is probably
derived from the Hindi tari, the juice of the Palmyra palm, from which
an alcoholic drink is made.
L.J. Mullin
Palms in Manica Province of Mozambique
It was with interest that I read about Tom Muller's garden walk in the
January Edition of Tree Life. Tom's walks are always interesting and it
prompted me to start writing about some of the trees and vegetation that
I have seen in the Manica and the Sofala provinces of Mozambique over
the past three years in the course of my various wanderings. I have been
meaning to write some of what I have seen for Tree Life, but due to a
somewhat chaotic existence I never got around to putting pen, or word
processor, to paper. What better trees to start with than palms and pandans!
Like in Zimbabwe Phoenix reclinata has a very wide range of habitats;
I have seen it growing from the mountains along the border to coastal
dunes and practically right up to the beaches along the coast. It is very
common along the Pungwe Flats, in the Mossurize and Buzi Valleys nearly
always near water.
Raphia farinifera is probably more common in Mozambique, than in Zimbabwe,
though it is not wide¬spread but locally common along rivers, and
its seed appears to often be spread along river courses after it has flowered
and died. A few Mozambican farmers actually plant it near their machambas
or farms – presumably for raffia to use in basketwork or similar
purposes. There is a very good stand of Raphia farinifera by a river about
half way between Vanduzi and Catandica (formerly Vila Gouveia).
Borassus aethiopum – known in Mozambique as the Palmeira –
is wide spread and is often planted near villages. It is particularly
common in Barué District, but can be seen around Manica, Bandula
– near the main Beira Road, in the Mossurize Valley and in numerous
other places. It appears to be adapted to a fairly wide range of environments.
The easiest way to tell the difference between Borassus and Hyphaene is
that in the latter the fan leaves have a very bluish cast, whilst in the
former the leaves are normally quite a darkish green. The fruit is also
much larger. Lastly Hyphaene normally only grows in fairly dry areas –
by Mozambican standards that is – whilst Borassus grows in both
areas of high and low rainfall.
Hyphaene coriacea is not so common; I have seen it in Mossurize, Caia,
Sena, Tambara, and the Pungwe Flats and in the Gorongosa Game Reserve.
The diff¬erences between it and Borassus are described above.
Around Gondola, Amatongas and Doroe the Oil raffia, Elaeis guineensis,
appears to have escaped cultivation and occasionally can be seen growing
in the woodland forest mosaic that is characteristic of that area. There
are some fine specimens – planted – on the northern margin
of the road by the Amatongas Mission, and it is commonly planted around
the City of Beira. From about this same area the Coconut Palm –
Cocos nucifera – starts to look respectable and can occasionally
be seen around villages, though it does not become proliferous until just
before Dondo is reached.
Lastly something special – although not a palm a close relative
and member of the Pandan or Screw-pine family Pandanaceae – Pandanus
livingstonianus. These are very common along certain stretches of the
Lucite (Rusitu) River, between the Sitatonga Mountains and Dombe, and
probably further down stream. They are gregarious along the river bank
near the site of the old bridge on the Gogoi to Dombe road, which is a
very beautiful spot with magnificent view towards the Chimanimani Mountains
some 30 km to the west. The Pandans reach considerable heights. Having
only seen pandans in parks and botanical gardens before, I was never really
sure why they were called screw pines, but the large specimens definitely
take on the appearance of a large pine tree, but of course with very different
leaves. Pandanus livingstonianus also occurs along the Munhinga River
near Sussundenga and Old Mavita.
J.H. Bannerman.
Nyarupinda catchment January 1994
1993 retrospect
Phragmites mauritianus has thrived in the shallow places in the Nyarupinda
River now that it carries more water to top up the Nyarupinda dam where
the frogs croaked in winter; perhaps this is the reason for more frogs
on our premises. The shores of the dam have been submerged for a longer
time than ever before, which has resulted in the death of coarse grasses
and tough vegetation. Irrigation has lowered the level and during the
past three months the shores have become clothed with shorter finer tufted
grasses such as Digitaria, Paspalum and a short grass with soft spreading
panicles that look misty at a distance. On higher ground very few orchids
and red flame lilies have emerged to flower, the climbing Gloriosa is
rampant and continues to bloom. Many geophyllous orchids have not yet
made their leaf. Beautifully pleated erect solitary leaves of Nervilia
sp. have appeared for the first time in the vicinity of the civetry nearest
the garden; elsewhere another species with purple on one side of its leaf
may be found when the ground becomes sodden. The yellow flowers of Pterocarpus
angolensis and Pterocarpus rotundifolius have lasted, a long time in the
absence of rain and storms, the Wattle, Peltophorum africanum has been
spectacular, it is followed by the less attractive heavily scented flowers
of Acacia amythethophylla. The star-like yellow blooms of Grewia monticola
are almost over now. Lonchocarpus capassa is weighed down with pods.
The Scene
This district is very short of rain and sharing water for irrigation is
a problem. There is an alarming increase in the rat population; they are
attacking crops such as maize, groundnuts and paprika. In the garden they
have climbed the mango trees to eat the fruit in situ, the pips hang,
all forlorn, on the fruit stalks. So far there are no reports of damage
in the young plantations of fruit trees.
Today January 14th there was a Giant Rat in the shelter which houses the
pool filter; this visitor seems to highlight the recent changes in the
occurrence of rodents. Whilst this rat resisted removal, a yellow parasitic
cockroach was seen on the fur on its belly. A new burrow excavated since
there was a shower on January 11th will be investigated, its entrance
is well hidden with undergrowth, and the opening is about the right size
for the Giant Eat. A large quantity of soil has been moved, about two
bucketful’s, on top of it amongst fine gravel there are several
black droppings typical of a rodent. This burrow is some 100 metres from
where the rat was found.
Surprise, surprise, a few minutes ago on returning from the rat hole something
made me look back and there was a black and white flowered Ceropegia on
a shoulder-high Combretum molle. It had up to forty flowers of all ages
in each cluster at the nodes. Miles have been trudged to find a sight
like this; here it is almost on the doorstep!
Bark Spiders
With reference to the bark spider mentioned in Tree Life 167, this species
or a similar one is described by Alistair Chambers in the book entitled
African Seasons, Wildlife at the Waterhole which is illustrated by Craig
Bone. There is a pencil drawing of the spider (Caerostris) in repose.
Further observation of the spider in the box at Tinto showed that it was
nocturnal, made temporary webs in which insects en¬tangled themselves;
it reared up supported only by its two pairs of hind legs when threatened.
After a week in the box the spider walked with a sprightly step to freedom
spinning a thread of silk as it descended the trunk of a Mnondo tree in
the garden. Almost immediately it retraced its steps and settled head
downward in the base of a fissure in the bark, at eye level. This tree
has been visited frequently, to catch another glimpse of the spider –
wishful thinking, because it can resemble aborted branchlets, knots in
wood and paired thorns that deceive predators at large in the daytime,
chiefly Spider Hunting Wasps. The spider is the size of a twenty cent
piece surmounted by a pair of woody prongs, this is what to look for,
good luck. It had been fortunate to find this rarity on a path beside
the house.
Grewia monticola and the Carder Bee.
Early in November there was a spindle-shaped woolly growth on a branch
of Grewia monticola. It was a cocoon, the nest of a Carder bee probably
Serapista sp. (family Megachilidae) so called because of their habit of
combing plant material to produce cotton wool-like fibres that they use
to construct their nest. These bees collect pollen; they look a bit like
a bumble bee/carpenter bee but smaller about 2 cm long.
Mrs. Moira FitzPatrick Curator of Invertebrates at the Natural History
Museum in Bulawayo remarked that there were still larvae in the nest that
she had received from me; they will try to rear them and then give a definite
identification. For further information on the Carder bee see S.H. Skaife's
African Insect Life.
My apologies for bad spelling in my previous letter, it must have been
due to domestic blindness/drought lethargy, Aborigines and arthropods
are not difficult words to spell.
Protea Atlassing
This project has not caught on in Zimbabwe, what is the good, there seems
to be no future in it. The field card of the trees and shrubs of Zimbabwe
lists three species of Faurea and a subspecies. The Protea amount to five,
possibly six species so that there is not the necessity of conserving
biodiversity which is the most important aim of the Project in South Africa,
where some species have become extinct and others seriously endangered.
Down South there are 80 Protea species, which can be atlassed by beginners,
and 350 Proteaceae species for enthusiasts.
The data recorded in the field will be of use to taxonomists who catalogue
and describe species and to plant biogeographers who study the history
of why species occur where they occur. To evolutionary biologists who
study how plants speciate; to ecologists who study what factors limit
the distribution of species; and last but not least it benefits every
Atlasser who enjoyed contributing to the conservation, and understanding
of their country's floral wealth. There are 136 active atlassers in South
Africa, Swaziland and Zimbabwe, by December 1993 the Botany Department
at Cape Town University had received 6739 Sight Record Sheets which provided
30 321 records of Proteaceae. Data collecting began between June and September
1991. To date there are only 29 known species of this family which have
not been atlassed. In two years of atlassing two new species have been
discovered. Herbaria records indicate that the discovery of new species
has dropped since 1950 from one species every 18 months to one species
every five years.
In Zimbabwe there are some relatively unexplored places in the mountainous
regions where a new species might occur. Another way to find one is when
the Atlasser provides the material necessary to describe an unnamed species
collected by the herbarium whose material is inadequate to distinguish
the species as different. This is as good as discover¬ing a species!
Whilst searching through the Protea Atlas Newsletters (21 of them) one
important fact has evaded me, it is the total number of species to be
atlassed, probably nearly 400.
I.B.M.G. Raffingora 18.1.94
KENT ESTATE 16 JANUARY 1994
For the small that party braved the rainy conditions the dry turned out
to be somewhat different to what was expected; the area surrounding the
ridge we intended to walk along was the territory of a large male ostrich.
Oscar (for wont of a better name) made our acquaintance early in the morning.
Oscar was armed with an excellent pair of claws and was bursting with
curiosity, but his presence was not really welcome although it was fascinating
to watch his courtship display at very close range. We moved our vehicles
to the other side of the ridge but within ten minutes the ostrich once
more appeared on the scene! It took a good deal of effort to entice our
curious, stubborn long-legged friend out of the fenced enclosure. Mervyn
then parked his truck across the entrance – resulting in a highly
frustrated bird.
A saunter up the ironstone ridge revealed a number of Ochna puberula (the
granite Ochna) and a few droopy-leaved Tarenna neurophylla. Being mainly
Brachystegia woodland the usual highveld species were well represented
as well as a few large specimens of interesting hybrids. Some exciting
finds were a fruiting Hexalobus monopetalus, Rhoicissus revoilii with
tiny, almost petal free flowers and a small but striking red flowered
member of the Iris family Anomatheca grandiflora.
Another interesting find was Garcinia buchananii also in fruit, whose
leaves exude the typical, yellow sap when damaged.
Incidentally, we saw many little spiny spiders – later identified
as Kite Spiders. According to Dr. Martin Filmer’s book Southern
African Spiders, the family is Araneidae and the sub-family is (wait for
it) Gasteracanthinae. These spiders are easily recognised by the bright
colouring on the abdomen – usually red, black and yellow –
and also by flattened spiny projections arranged laterally and posteriorly.
As with the other Orb Weaver spiders the Kite Spider is sedentary and
prefers to wait at the centre of its web for prey to fly up into the snare
threads.
To escape the approaching rain we beat a hasty retreat down the ridge
passing a heavily browsed Elephantorrhiza goetzei and a cluster of Dichrostachys
cinerea. Strangely enough a plucked leaf of Elephantorrhiza goetzei smelt
very similar to crated peaches!
Our feathered friend welcomed our return, fortunately from the other side
of the fence by inflating his neck and uttering the strange booming sound
peculiar to his species. We escaped ostrich and rain by a few minutes
but after an hour’s downpour decided to head home. Many thanks to
the Manager and Derek Lenton for arranging and allowing us to wander about
this interesting part of Kent Estates.
WHAT IS BUTTRESSING?
Sizwe Cawe replies:
Buttresses are modified lateral roots that form wing-like expansions at
the base of large tree trunks.
Although buttressing is characteristic of tropical and sub-tropical trees,
it also occurs in the temperate regions. The phenomenon is not confined
to any one family or group of families, but occurs in a wide range of
taxa. Buttresses are of two main types; stilt and plank buttresses. The
distinction between these buttress types is not absolute; both being modifi¬cations
of lateral roots and structures inter¬mediate between them are common.
Some species, for example Grewia coriacea have both stilt roots and plank
buttresses.
Stilt roots
These are woody roots that spring from the main tree trunk above the ground
and curve downwards and enter the soil. In southern Africa stilt roots
are associated with mangroves such as the red mangrove Rhizophora mucronata,
but in more tropical areas stilt roots also occur in many species of freshwater
swamp forests and of normal well-drained rain forest. Some of the plant
families in which stilt roots occur Include Combretaceae, Euphorbiaceae,
Annonaceae, Tiliaceae, Myrtaceae, Moraceae, Burseraceae and Araceae.
Stilt roots are common in the tropics and subtropics, but are very rare
in temperate regions. Within the tropics and subtropics the occurrence
of stilt roots appears to vary with soil type and individual species show
variation with regard to this character. Some species that are stilt-rooted
in swamp forest lack these structures in well-drained soil.
The adaptive significance of stilt roots is uncertain. They appear to
be of value in anchorage, especially under swampy conditions, but the
fact that they are commoner in small trees, mainly growing in the sheltered
undergrowth, than in tall trees with heavy crowns to support, suggests
that the true explanation lies elsewhere. There is, however, a correlation
bet¬ween moisture and the occurrence of stilt roots. In some parts
of the world the height on the trunks to which stilt roots occur coincides
with the highest level reached by floods in the district.
Plank buttresses
Also known as tabular roots, plant buttresses are flat, triangular plates
subtended by the angle between the trunk and lateral roots. Unlike stilt
roots, which spring from the main axis 1 m or more above the ground, plank
buttresses arise at, or just above, ground level. Plank buttressing occurs
when the upper surfaces of lateral roots grow faster than the lower surfaces
(epinastic growth) and is much more common than stilt buttressing, occurring
in many different plant families. Most tree with buttresses exceed 30
m in height and often form the forest canopy or are emergent, but buttressing
in lower strata is not uncommon.
The lateral roots from which plank buttresses form begins with a normal
structure and acquire their peculiar modifications later. The onset of
plank buttressing varies between different species, occurring much earlier
in some species than in others. Although the size, shape and thickness
of plank buttresses vary between and within species, these can be of diagnostic
value. In some species buttresses extend up to 9 m up the trunk and for
an equal distance away from it. Such large buttresses are sometimes used
for making dining tables.
Why do buttresses form?
No satisfactory explanation for the formation of buttresses has been put
forward. It used to be thought that buttresses help the tree to withstand
the stresses due to wind and gravity. However, their paucity in temperate
regions where violent storms are common, suggests that support is not
a primary function of buttresses. Furthermore, buttresses are absent in
the eucalypts of Australia and the giant sequoias of California, which
are much taller than tropical forest trees. Tropical rain forest trees
are usually held up by a network of lianas far more effectively than buttresses.
It has been suggested that in trees with shallow lateral roots the tran¬spirational
stream bringing in dissolved nutrients from the soil encourages growth
in the sectors of the cambium on the same radii as the lateral roots at
the expenses of the intervening sectors and leads to the formation of
ridges, which in time become buttresses. According to this explanation
the frequency of buttressing in the wet tropics is due to the water¬logged
condition of the soil and all species are not buttressed because in some
species the taproot may be tolerant of water logging. This explanation
is dis¬counted by the fact that buttressed trees with taproots are
known and it does not account for the absence of buttressing in shallow
rooted trees in temperate regions. Other workers suggest that buttress
form¬ation is the direct response of the tree to mechanical stimulation
by the wind. According to this view the wind stimulates cambium on the
upper side of the proximal end of the lateral roots and in the adjoining
part of the trunk, causing buttresses to form. In line with this explanation,
significant correlation between buttress orientation and the direction
of the prevailing winds has been recorded in temperate regions. Such a
correlation is absent in tropical areas.
In general, buttressing appears closely related to the type of root system
and the nature of the soil. It occurs most frequently in shallow-rooted
trees grow¬ing on poorly drained soils.
Sizwe Cawe
University of Transkei
Veld & Flora Sept. 1993. Acknowledged with thanks to Author and Publisher.
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