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September 2000
247
JOURNAL
OF THE
TREE
SOCIETY OF ZIMBABWE
P.O BOX 2128
HARARE
TREE LIFE
While the present problems persist please check with any of the committee
members to ensure that the scheduled outings and walks will actually take
place. Their phone numbers are listed on the last page of this issue.
MASHONALAND CALENDAR
Saturday 2 September. Originally our Botanic Garden Walk was cancelled
for two months but, happily for us, Tom insists that he is well enough
to lead our walk this month; so we will meet Tom in the car park at 10.45
for 11 a.m.
Sunday 17 September. Back to another of our favourite haunts – Gosho
Park near Marondera. This nature reserve is the property of Peterhouse
College and this outing has been arranged by Rob Burrett who is teaching
at Peterhouse and has made an extensive study of the Park, so an interesting
day is guaranteed. Directions: From Harare take the Mutare Road to Marondera.
Pass through the village turning left at the sign post to Springvale Girls'
School (approx. 83.5km and 1.5 hours). Continue to the school gate at
the end of the road. Turn left into the park. The security guard will
admit you on presentation of your Tree Life. Meet at the camp site which
Rob has reserved for our group. We will look at some patches of trees
which appear to be different to others in the area, and after lunch Rob
will take us to his Eastern Highlands out¬liers in the kopjies towards
the north of the Park. Rob may still have his excavation open at the time
and would be willing to show members and talk about the hole in the ground.
Bring your lunch and a chair for a spring day in the bush.
Saturday 23 September. Mark's walk will take us through the arboretum
in Prince Edward School. Leslee Maasdorp planted most of the trees and
we hope she will be able to accompany us on the walk. Directions: Turn
into the main gates of PE on J. Tongogara Ave near the corner with Prince
Edward Street. Park in the car park immediately on the right. Meet at
2.30 p.m.
Tuesday 3 October. Back to summer time for our Botanic Garden Walk.
Sunday 15 October. To be decided.
Saturday 28 October. Mark's Walk.
MATABELELAND CALENDAR
Sunday 3 September. Meet in the car park at Girls' College at 8.30 a.m.
for possibly a tree naming exercise on NUST campus.
Sunday 1 October. Lumeni Falls – south Matopos. In all cases please
contact a committee member for con¬firmation.
WOODLAND, VLEI AND GRASSLAND
It was Dr. Oliver West who explained to me why trees did not normally
occur in vleis and I have never had reason to doubt what he said. That
was in 1966 when he was Chief Pasture Research Officer in the Department
of Research and Specialist Services.
Vlei is a South African term derived from the Dutch word 'vallei' meaning
valley. Common in sandveld in Mashonaland, vleis are gently sloping land
depressions which are seasonally waterlogged due to restricted soil drainage.
In the 'dambos' of Malawi and Zambia the phenomenon is more strongly developed,
whereas in the lowveld, on account of the lower rainfall and greater evaporation,
true vleis are uncommon.
Vleis in Mashonaland are characterised by a dense cover of grasses with
Hyparrhenia spp. dominating. Trees are normally absent or rare. In the
hot dry season when the grasses have senesced and dried off, the vleis
can burn very fiercely. Vleis are the sponges in the hydrological balance
that slowly release the water stored from the summer rains to maintain
stream flow through the dry season. In order to sustain this dry season
flow it is important that trees do not invade the vleis as they would
have the effect of drying them out prematurely. Vleis also provide valuable
thatching grass apart from useful grazing in the early summer before the
rains start. Ecologically, they are important and should be preserved.
But why are they distinct from woodland?
It is principally the seasonal waterlogging that makes them unsuitable
for most tree growth but fire and, less so, frosts are ancillary factors.
Grasses being shallow rooted and of shorter longevity, grow successfully
on the poorly drained vlei soils but trees, being perennial with deeper
root systems, generally require deep well drained soil. The soils above
the vlei margins are better drained and therefore suited to a woodland
climax, which in Mashonaland, is most commonly Brachystegia woodland.
But occasionally trees do occur in vleis, Acacia polyacantha (white thorn)
and other acacia species, for example, encroach into vleis especially
where periodic grass fires are absent. Whilst these species can evidently
tolerate a degree of water¬logging, they are sensitive to fire damage
especially when young. As veld burning becomes less common, so encroachment
increases. Severe frost may also kill young acacia trees.
Similarly, Syzygium guineense (water berry), a tree renowned for its unusual
ability to grow in per¬manently wet spots along perennial streams,
is extremely sensitive to fire damage and therefore normally does not
grow in vleis except where the surrounding grass remains green and non
inflammable.
Interestingly, a subspecies of Syzygium guineense, is well adapted to
survive within a vlei environ¬ment although not easily seen. This
is Syzygium huillense which is unusual in that the contorted stem is prostrate
just below the soil surface where it lies protected from fire and frost.
Each year low foliage growth emerges from the stem. This 'tree' species
is better known for its ornamental value as the contorted subterranean
stem is collected as a form of driftwood.
But perhaps the most common incidence of trees in vlei land are those
growing on termite mounds which present a favourable habitat for tree
colonisation because of the free drainage. Diospyros lycioides (blue bush
or red star-apple) is common in such colonies often with Schotia brachypetala
(Boer-bean or fuchsia tree). The mound, being elevated, also affords a
degree of protection against fire. These ant-heap tree colonies do not
impair the sponge attributes of vleis and are not harmful.
Regular frosts, as those which occur in vleis at the higher altitudes,
especially as cold air tends to drain and settle into these depressions,
can kill off the shoots of woody plants and so discourage their invasion
into vleis. Frost also has a less direct effect in that it kills off the
top hamper of grasses making for a hot fire later in the season which
in turn is more damaging to any trees attempting to gain a foothold in
the vlei.
In the lowveld, true vleis are seldom a feature of the landscape. Nevertheless,
there are open grass¬land areas, not necessarily depressions, as typified
by the deep basalt clay soils which extend in a belt south-westwards from
Chisum¬banje to the Mateke Hills. These soils are mostly free of tree
growth especially where slopes are shallow and surface runoff is slow.
Urochloa spp. commonly dominates in these grasslands. The basalt soils
are extremely fertile in nutrients and have a high water holding capacity
and are often referred to as self-churning clays on account of their plasticity.
On wetting they swell into a structureless mass but, as they dry, they
shrink with great force to form deep cracks and the surface layer crumbles.
It is this forceful cracking upon drying that has been suggested as being
the factor that prevents trees from growing on these soils. Roots have
been seen to have to have been ruptured in these cracks. However, it is
well known that trees generally can endure heavy pruning both to aerial
parts as well as to roots without suc¬cumbing. And it is also true
that in other areas, broken roots will commonly regenerate into coppice
growth as seen in recently slumped and ripped fields, providing the soil
conditions are satisfactory. So the reason for the general absence of
trees on these soils may lie not in the cracking phenomenon, but in some
other factor.
When dry, the cracks allow rain water to enter the soil until the resultant
swelling from wetting closes the cracks and water movement then becomes
very restricted due to the extremely fine texture of the clay particles
and the lack of crumb structure. The soil remains saturated and poorly
aerated, until the drying process by evaporation from the soil surface
aided by transpiration by plant roots reaches the cracking and crumbling
stage again. This seasonal waterlogging will militate against tree growth,
the same process as in the waterlogged vlei. Mopane (Colophospermum mopane)
does occur on these grasslands but usually sparsely and often in stunted
suffrutex form with, interestingly, a prostrate, contorted and highly
weathered stem, not unlike the prostrate Syzygium huillense found in true
vleis and described above.
Zimbabwe is known for its woodlands and, apart from Man's activities,
the ecological distribution of these woodlands is governed in the main
by the degree of free soil drainage. The natural grasslands, other than
the montane grasslands, occur on soils which are seasonally waterlogged
and which are unsuitable to most tree species except those few that can
stand 'wet feet'.
The natural grasslands of the montane regions along the Eastern border
of Zimbabwe are mostly fire induced grassland climaxes as they occur on
exceptionally well drained soils of these high rainfall areas. It is unfortunate
that they are evidently subject at present to encroachment by introduced
plantation species of pine and wattle, the eradication of which is probably
best achieved by hand grubbing or hand applied arboricides. Although in
theory able to eradicate the encroachers, fire in these high rainfall
grasslands can be extremely damaging to the indigenous forests of which
there are now only isolated remnants in fire protected localities.
J.H.W.
BULAWAYO BRANCH OUTING
6th AUGUST, 2000
It was a nearly perfect day; except for the wind. The bite in its breath
betrayed its Antarctic breed¬ing. Mind you, this day did not have
that auspicious a beginning! When I locked my gate I observed on it the
fall-out from the foggy-foggy dew that had shrouded the landscape some
hours earlier. Fast moving clouds came up and obscured the sun, and it
was only when we arrived at our destination that they cleared and drifted
away, leaving a cloudless sky.
A jumbo jet was now visible, so very high that the sound of its engines
only reached us after it had passed. But the vapour trails from the four
engines were dramatic proof of its passing.
The Bulawayo Branch of the Tree Society had found a wild, quiet tract
of land, where it could wander peacefully, without troubles! This is land
owned by the Municipality of Bulawayo, desig¬nated as a recreation
area for all its citizens.
In places the geography and flora superficially resemble those at the
Matobo Hills. There are granite outcrops. Pink Peeling Paper-bark trees
abound (Albizia tanganyicensis).
There was a vast expanse of fairly flat granite rock, surrounded by trees.
On this rock were to be found many of the curious succulents called Anacampseros
rhodesiaca. The minute plants are easily overlooked, resembling as they
do, tiny weenie remnants of paper that has been torn up and scattered.
After the first rains, they will flower, putting forth white or pink blossoms
of incredibly delicate beauty. These flowers only open in the afternoon.
As the whole plant is wedged frequently in between the cracks in the granite,
one is lucky to find them in flower, as they are only a few millimetres
in height.
However, the ultimate in disguise was a Delosperma that littered the ground
like dis¬carded pieces of string, and which hardly merited a second
glance.
It is a grand place for Commiphora. Altogether we found more than seventy-two
different trees or shrubs, which included six Commiphora – Commiphora
marlothii, Commiphora mollis, Commiphora schimperi, Commiphora africana,
Commiphora glandulosa, and Commiphora mossambicensis.
There were four species of Combretum – Combretum apiculatum, Combretum
collinum, Combretum molle and Combretum zeyheri, and four Ficus sp. –
Ficus abutilifolia, Ficus glumosa, Ficus ingens and Ficus thonningii.
And four species of Grewia – Grewia bicolor, Grewia flava, Grewia
flavescens, and Grewia monticola.
There were plenty of enormous Kirkia acuminata. Some of these had been
felled, and the middle sections of the trunks extracted. Jean imparted
the knowledge that these trees are much in demand for carving because
their wood doesn't need to be cured before being used, and subsequently
doesn't crack.
Four eagles soared by. They could have been brown snake eagles. They reminded
me of the song in "Oklahoma" which mentions a hawk making lazy
circles in the sky and how "we belong to the land, and the land we
belong to is grand."
I marvelled how these great birds, in their anonymous brown plumage could,
so effort¬lessly, sail against a stiff wind without flapping their
wings or ruffling a feather.
Very far away, I could hear a Chin-spot Batis singing its spring song,
"Three blind mice.” A Brubru shrike interposed its twin notes.
This bird is the only one I know that can sing two notes simultaneously.
They are less than a semitone apart.
Surprisingly sparse, both in distribution and number were the Acacia trees.
There were only three representatives present of this normally prolific
and prominent family – Acacia ataxacantha, Acacia nigrescens and
Acacia nilotica, and these occurred singly, in isolation from each other.
No doubt due to the excellent rainy season we have just experienced, many
trees still carried their foliage, making identification so much easier.
The Aloe excelsa were all magnificently in flower. As many of these were
extremely tall, their trunks and red or orange flower spikes pro¬truded
above the canopies of the surrounding trees.
We lunched in one of the seemingly barren patches of sodic soils that
always accompany the Mopane woods. Here were many small Commiphora and
a simply splendid hybrid Aloe excelsa X aculeata. It stood as high as
a neighbouring pure Aloe excelsa. However the racemes of the hybrid panicle
were much shorter, stubbier and thicker than those of the pure species.
The opening flowers showed the typical yellow colour associated with Aloe
aculeata and absent from Aloe excelsa.
Anthon remarked that the racemes of the local Aloe excelsa all pointed
nearly vertically up¬wards and differed in this respect from those
in other places in the country, where they are inclined to be more angular.
Several small succulents clustered in great pro¬fusion at the bases
of the Mopane trees. These were Crassula, Kalanchoe, and one stapeliad,
Duvalia polita.
Eventually it was time to return to town. Anthon, we thank you for sharing
this place with us. We had a lovely day, and we are also grateful for
your imparted knowledge.
Norma Hughes
Nyarupinda Catchment July 2000
The Scene
It is the 28th July and the cool dry season is with us, among many vegetation
delights are garden peas and sweet peas. So far this month the crack o'
dawn temperature has dropped to 5 degrees C on five occasions. Since the
hot wet season ended there has been more cloud than usual; those clear
bright sunny days beginning with crisp mornings have been less frequent.
A temperature inversion nearby was an event to photograph, at sunrise,
a clearly defined lake of mist filling the valley opposite this house.
Water and a few tall tree islands reached a shoreline halfway up Jese
kopjie five km distant. Upon rising the impact of this view will always
be remembered as Lake Nyarupinda.
Figs and Birds
This morning has been rather unsettled because the calls of Green pigeons
(Treron calva) and Meyer's Parrots (Poicephalus meyeri) have de¬mand¬ed
attention. They were not feeding but probably attracted by a splendid
crop of small green furry figs on Ficus thonningii, one of these is inside
the fence around Tinto hill, another is outside at the level of surrounding
ground. This is the ‘lowveld’ where an intro¬duced Baobab
now has a soil level girth of 112 cm, a wild mango Cordyla africana has
a cir¬cum¬ference of 85cm and has not flowered yet, this sight
is eagerly awaited, a profusion of yellow. Other smaller trees are lowveld
fig Ficus stuhlmannii, Tamarindus indica has pro¬duced its delicate
small orchid-like blooms at three consecutive Christmas times. There is
a mopane, Colophospermum mopane tall, stately and virginal, hasten the
time when antelopes browse under it.
There have been three avian visitors to the house this month. Today a
Meyer's Parrot left the flock and inspected the level top of the double
chimney for quite a while, enough time to nip away and get the binoculars.
It was intent on something up there, wire-netting covers the openings;
occasionally the wood fire is needed, a hot spot for a nest and smoky
too. A Lesser Striped Swallow Hirundo abyssinica flew round and round
among the kitchen rafters until at long last it came lower, settled and
saw the open door to freedom, whilst inside we hoped it had a meal of
aerial arthropods. On another occasion when sitting in the kitchen in
the sunshine, beating some¬thing for a cake and when having a breather
a little bird came down from the roof and sat on my knee for a few moments.
It looked about and pecked once at my apron, it moved to my chest, possibly
attracted to the diamante floral design on a scarlet tracksuit top. Beside
me was Ken Newman’s bird book open at the sunbirds and here was
one on my lap. Beating resumed when it left, then there was a flurry beside
my head, a lull, and then another flurry which suggested that it had settled
on my back – so lightly – it was not felt. This fearless little
bird was a male miombo Sunbird a double-collared Sunbird, Nectarinia manoensis.
A Very Late Item from January 2000.
Approximately 10 male foam nest tree frogs have had their breeding domain
invaded by many hundreds of small dark grey mottled snails feeding on
algae at the water line and below where they attach themselves to the
wall of an open reservoir. These gastropods (belly-walkers) are water
bird and otter food; it would benefit us if something came to devour the
snails before they block the outlet pipe. The invasion ended when the
reservoir had its occasional empty and scrub.
A Woodland Observation.
Something unusual happened in the Brachystegia woodland when the rains
were more or less established early this year. The presence of variegated
and some completely white foliage on a large number of different kinds
of plants. Lowly subjects affected were a running grass, blackjack seedlings,
Makoni tea bush, Adenia goetzei, white-flowered Pentas and a Dyschoriste.
Samples of trees collected were Lannea discolor, Bauhinia petersiana,
Senna singueana, Euclea divinorum (always so dark green). A sapling of
Acacia sieberiana, Combretum molle, Steganotaenia araliacea carrot tree
had the first white-edged green leaves, these alerted us, and thereafter
the list was made. New growth of semi-parasite Tapinanthus sp. on Chinese
lantern tree Dichrostachys cinerea growing in full sun¬shine, was
white. Annually this broad-leaved woodland has normal leaves, the canopy
is not dense and light intensity is that of speckled shade. Cattle have
disturbed most of this terrain. Doubtless a solution to this question
of lack of chlorophyll will be forthcoming in these pages. Has this aberration
been seen elsewhere?
Civet News.
Their menu has changed to include Sucking porc(upine), bananas, decorated,
or rather, garnished with silver paper and red and white wool.
Temperature just at dawn today was 5½ºC in the carport on
the first level below the house, 2½ºC in the ‘lowveld'
vegetable garden.
That is all today July 29th 2000. Keep your spirits up.
I.B.M.G Raffingora, Ayrshire District.
SEEING RED
Everybody knows tomato plants can't see. So why is it they produce more
tomatoes when they are surrounded by the colour red?
Michael Kasperbauer, a plant physiologist with the Department of Agriculture's
Coastal Plains research station, in South Carolina, has discovered that
if you surround tomato plants with a red plastic mulch (a mod version
of that stuff gardeners spread around trees), they'll increase their productivity
by as much as 20%. What it comes down to, he says, is competition. Tomato
plants, it seems, respond to a type of red light called far-red. Among
the plant's proteins sensitive to the far-red light units, or photons,
is a tiny pigment called phytochrome, which basically functions as the
CEO of plant growth: When the far-red photons hit the plant, the phytochrome
takes it as an indication that it's surrounded by voluptuous tomato-producing
neighbours. Not to be outdone, the phytochrome directs the aboveground
portion of the plant to get moving. And the plant responds by producing
in force.
The strange thing is, the far-red light the phytochrome senses isn't even
coming from the neighbouring tomatoes – it's bouncing off the plant's
leaves. In some weird twist on colour blindness, plants see far-red where
humans see green. This Kasperbauer can't explain, saying only, "Of
course a tomato can't see!"
R E Sullivan, Jr.
The preceding article appeared in the April 2000 issue of Gourmet magazine.
To those who still remember Kim Damstra's article in Tree Life 199 –
Why do young leaves flush out red? there is no great mystery to this "weird
twist on colour blindness'. In his article Kim explained how plants use
and absorb red light and reflect away the complementary colour, green
– which is what we see as being the colour of a leaf. Having more
red light around, whether from the plastic or neighbouring fruit, would
enhance the 'red-wavelength feeling' of the tomato plant.
However, I must confess that I am still slightly confused with Kim's article
which used red, blue and yellow as the primary colours, and green, orange
and purple as the secondaries since those primaries are not the "true"
primaries, but are psychological primaries (along with green, black and
white) used in art and advertising! Whilst not great on physics, I understand
the (subtractive) primaries to be magenta, cyan and yellow and the resultant
secondaries green, red, and blue, resulting in a quite different colour
wheel! Perhaps if any reader is interested we can clarify this issue at
some later date.
Ian Riddell
In Retrospect continued. By Lyn Mullin
ANCIENT WISDOM
The following is a brief extract from a longer note by George Hall, titled
THE IMPORTANCE OF REGROWTH and published in TREE LIFE No.31 (September
1982):
The ancient wisdom, found widely where tribal tradition is still strong,
whereby trees harvested for fuel or poles are cut off at about waist height,
is not the idleness I have sometimes heard it labelled. This custom ensures
that the [coppice] regeneration would get away quickly, and get above
the dangers of fire, frost, and browse in the first season. In many densely
populated communal lands demand is such that this ancient wisdom cannot
now be followed, and the result of clear-felling down to ground level,
where the first season's growth is neither as strong nor as fully protected
from danger, is seen in devastated areas that one does not have to travel
far from the capital city to find.
NATURE INTERTWINED
The following article by Meg and Paul Coates Palgrave was based on thoughts
by Trevor Gordon, and was attached to TREE LIFE No.34 (December 1982):
The identification of trees and plants is no easy matter for the layman.
However, if a real interest is taken and keen observations made, the task
becomes easier and infinitely more interesting. Habitats, such as granite
kopjies, river banks, or open woodland; seasonal variations, such as spring
or autumn leaf colours, as well as the times of flowering (for instance
our proteas and the two commonest cassias can easily be identified by
the time at which they flower). Altitude can often be critical, and the
general shape or field impression of the tree, often scorned by the botanist
who has long since passed that stage, may be so helpful to the beginner.
One of the most beautifully shaped trees is the Mobola plum, Parinari
curatellifolia; it always seems to have been pruned to a perfect toadstool
shape. And, in contrast, the Muwanga, Pericopsis angolensis, with crooked,
pearly stems that, no matter how much they bend and twist, always end
with the leaf canopy in perfect symmetry.
Examination of the bark is not only very helpful, but in many cases reveals
consistent charac¬ter¬is¬tics – the delicately coloured,
peeling bark of Ochna pulchra (pulchra means beautiful). The malaria-yellow
bark of the fever tree, Acacia xanthophloea; the bark of the paperbark
Commiphora, Commiphora marlothii, and the paperbark Albizia, Albizia tanganyicensis,
peeling in sheets of yellow and red paper respectively, and the rainbow
colours of the bark of the tick tree, Sterculia africana.
Closer examination can be even more rewarding. Little tips can be found
that will always be recognizable in the future. For instance a 1 mm-diameter,
pale gland found at the junction of the leaf-stalk and the blade of the
leaf tells immediately that this is a species of Monotes. This little
gland is an extra-floral nectary, which only means that a nectar-producing
organ, for some reason, is not in the flower, but on the leaf. It has
been seen to exude its nectar, which dribbles down the leaf stalks, and
is eagerly sought by ants.
Talking of ants, many insects can be a great help with identification.
Butterflies are very particular in choosing the right food-plant for their
cater¬pillars, and land briefly on one plant after another, tasting
them with the taste-buds on their feet, then leaving that tree to taste
the next, repeating the performance until the right one is found. Then,
and only then, will they lay their eggs. This 'tasting flight' is quite
characteristic and recognizable, and when finally the egg is laid the
plant is identified! Not quite, actually, as each female butterfly has
a short list of plants that she will accept, but it narrows down the field
a great deal. To illustrate the point, the swallow¬tail butterflies
favour members of the citrus family, Rutaceae, but each species of swallowtail
uses only a few members of that family as food-plants. For instance in
the Murahwa’s Hill area at Mutare, the Mocker Swallowtail lays almost
ex¬clusively on Teclea nobilis, and the Emperor Swallowtail on Fagaropsis
angolensis, while the Citrus Swallowtail is so called for its pre¬valence
– to the extent of becoming a pest – on citrus trees.
Recently, at the Matopos, our attention was attracted to a tree by the
fact that Citrus and Green-banded Swallowtails were laying on its leaves.
As we immediately suspected, it proved to be the Cape chestnut, Calodendrum
capense, and as an added bonus it was in full flower.
Moths are usually haphazard layers. Every¬one must have seen moth
eggs laid on walls and windows or anywhere, laid close together in a bunch,
whereas butterflies usually lay them singly, dotted around the leaves.
Not, however, the moth of a gregarious caterpillar, Diapalpus congregarius,
which meticulously chooses Cassia leaves for its young to eat, almost
exclusively the winter cassia, Cassia singueana (Trevor Gordon records
find¬ing only one on a long-pod cassia, Cassia abbreviata). The caterpillars
build an untidy drooping nest of spider-like web in which to spin their
cocoons. Even after they have long-since hatched and flown away this nest
remains as a label with Cassia singueana written on it.
Take a moment, now, to think also that to an entomologist studying butterflies,
a nest of co¬coons on a Cassia tree is a label with Diapalpus congregarius
written on it. Con¬sider, too, that this entomologist, finding cater¬pillars
on a Cape chestnut, would immediately look up swallowtails in his book.
This is how closely all sections of nature are intertwined.
[Comment 2000: Cassia singueana has been reclassified as Senna singueana,
and it would seem that the moth, Diapalpus congregarius, knew all along
that Cassia and Senna were different genera. The one moth that Trevor
Gordon found on Cassia abbreviata might have been disorientated for one
reason or another!).
Parasitic wasps of the Braconid species are highly selective in the caterpillars
(and other insects) that they parasitize. Their ovipositors (egg-laying
tubes) puncture the victim's body, and they lay their eggs deep inside.
The grubs hatch and feed on the flesh around them (being careful not to
destroy any vital organs) until they mature, when they bore their way
out of the body, and weave their cocoons outside. An exam¬ination
of the cocoon on the back of the caterpillar will certainly identify both
caterpillar and wasp.
Here, of course, we come into the fascinating area of biological control,
where the prickly-pear plague of South Africa was eliminated by an insect,
and the rabbit plague of Australia was controlled by a virus. A dangerous
science, where the beneficial predator can so easily become a pest in
itself, but, properly controlled, very full of potential.
Many plants display galls which, our scientific dictionary says, are excrescences
caused by fungi, mites, or insects. With some tree species the presence
of galls is so characteristic as to give the clue needed to make identification.
The sight of a silver Terminalia, Terminalia sericea, in stark winter
leaflessness but covered in galls, is quite unmistakable. The pods of
wing-pod, Xeroderris stuhlmannii, can be so attacked that the tree seems
to be covered in berries, which is most misleading until the discovery
of one [unaffected] pod reveals the secret. And the infection of the flowers
or fruits of the water-berries, Syzygium spp., to form distinctive tangled
black masses, so easily identify the trees.
Look around you and note everything. The swift, flashing flight of the
beautiful Charaxes butter¬flies to a 'sucking tree' that is exuding
a sap they enjoy. A tree raining water to form pools beneath it in the
hottest, driest month of the year means the presence of a frog-hopper
insect infesting the tree, and sucking its sap so voraciously that it
is running in froth out of its body. This would almost certainly be the
rain tree, Lonchocarpus capassa (but there are a few other possible species),
and the insect would be Ptyelus grossus. As a protection against the heat
it covers its back with this froth, commonly called cuckoo spit in other
closely related species. Birds clustering in a tree will draw attention
to edible fruit or nectar-filled flowers; a browsing giraffe prefers Boscia
and Acacia species, and a square-lipped rhinoceros eats mainly the perennial
species of grass.
Heavy metals, such as nickel, chrome, copper, and arsenic are extremely
toxic to plants. That is why parts of the hills of the Great Dyke are
so characteristically bare of trees, and close examination will show that
the grass is a species tolerant of the heavy metals. On the Wedza Mountains
there is the 'nickel anomaly', an area where the concentration [of nickel]
is such that only 17 species of grasses, herbs, and trees have been found.
One woolly herb, Dicoma macrocephala, seems only to grow on nickel-bearing
soils, and has thus earned the name 'nickel flower". Similarly, Becium
homblei is the 'copper flower', and, even more specifically, certain groupings
of species give more accurate indications of certain metals.
The potential of the vegetation as a guide to locating economically important
minerals has been recognized for a long time, but it is only recently
that the matter has been treated seriously. This study can be divided
into two sections. (1) Geobotany, which is the recog¬nition of indicator
species, the tolerant ones strongly suggesting the presence of the metals;
and (2) Biogeochemistry, which is the chemical analysis of certain parts
of the plants to find out the concentration of the metal in the soil.
Research is making this study more exact all the time.
Disturbed ground around the foot of a tree immediately raises the question:
why? Are the roots edible to man or animal, or have they been sought after
by a medicine man for his potions? Bark stripped from a tree raises the
same questions. One should always notice everything, and question everything.
One cannot study just one facet of nature; all the other facets keep getting
in the way. But the more they get in the way, the more one realizes how
fascinating nature can be.
In Retrospect will be continued.
THE LAMPATIA AT HARARE FOREST NURSERY
Among the early introductions of forest trees at the Harare Forest Nursery,
off Orange Grove Drive in Highlands, was a specimen of Duabanga grandiflora
(formerly Duabanga sonneratioides). It belongs to the small botanical
family Sonneratiaceae, which com¬prises two genera only – Duabanga
(2 rain¬forest species) and Sonneratia (5 mangrove species). Duabanga
grandiflora is a large forest tree from India, Burma, Nepal, and the Andaman
and Nicobar Islands. It is known as lampatia in Nepal, khokan in Assam,
and myaukngo in Burma. It produces a soft wood that is easily seasoned
and is excellent for making tea chests. It has also been used for making
canoes and for the manufacture of matches.
The single specimen at the forest nursery is probably the only one of
its kind in Zimbabwe, and although there is no definite record, it must
have been planted around 1907. In February 1986 it had a height of 25.5
metres and a diameter of 91.3 centimetres, which is close to the dimensions
it commonly attains in its native habitat. It is an untidy-looking tree
with un¬pleasantly scented flowers that appear in clusters at the
ends of the branches. The tree requires a warm, moist climate, so it is
rather out of its element in Harare. In recent years there has been a
lot of die-back of the crown, and I suspect that it will not be with us
for very much longer.
Lyn Mullin
Mr. Lyn Mullin has done a great job compiling a list of Ndebele plant
names from three main sources, (1) FL Orpen (1951), Botanical-Vernacular
and Vernacular-Botanical Names of some Trees and Shrubs in Matabeleland.
This was originally published in the Rhodesia Agricultural Journal, Volume
XLVIII, No. 2, pages 165-181, March-April 1951, and reprinted as Bulletin
No. 1573 in the same year. (2) H. Wild (1972) A Rhodesian Botanical Dictionary
of African and English Plant Names, revised and enlarged by H.M. Biegel
and S. Mavi. And (3) J. Timberlake, C. Fagg, and RD Barnes (1999), Field
Guide to the Acacias of Zimbabwe.
The list is available to members for $50 to cover paper and postage, or
on a computer disc supplied by yourself, or by e-mail.
Please contact Maureen Silva-Jones.
Committee Members contact tel. Numbers
Harare
Andrew MacNaughtan Home 300035
Cell 091 315342
Mark Hyde Home 475263
Cell 091 233751
Rose Greig Home 490250
Lyn Mullin Home 747169
John Wilson Home 736700
Maureen Silva-Jones Home 740479
Cell 011 719601
Bulawayo Committee Members
Anthon Ellert Home 46586
Jonathan Timberlake Home 46529
Tessa Ball Home 46207
The Tree Society e-mail address is trees@mango.zw
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