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TREE
SOCIETY OF ZIMBABWE
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April 2004 JOURNAL
OF THE TREE LIFE MASHONALAND CALENDAR APRIL. Annual subs are now due. Prompt payment would be appreciated.
$5000 for Tree Life by email
or $10000 by post Tuesday 6th April. Botanic Garden
Walk. Meet Tom in the car park at 4.45 for 5 p.m. for a walk of
general interest. Sunday 18th April. For
a
day trip (or spend the weekend) to Mazvikadei Dam near Banket. There is accommodation available for a few
members to spend the weekend. Please contact Maureen if you wish
to reserve a space, and for other details.
It will be self catering.
Directions to Stand 139 Gold Dust township, Mazvikadei via Banket. At Banket
turn right after Spar, hotel and old looking garage onto tar road,
about 2 kms later turn left after high density township on to
tar road with 3 humps at the beginning (narrow tar after the humps).
Overgrown cemetery might be visible on the right. Keep driving, pass the tobacco research station.
The turning to Mazvikadei/Gold Dust about 12 kms from the
previous turning and near by on the right is an old butchery/store
in a field with a conical silo visible behind it. Turn right onto a tar road, this road bends
to the left and again to the right then to the left and you come
to the boom to the township proper.
You are visiting the R. Davis house, Stand no. 139. Go
through the boom and turn first right, first left, first green
gate in a white wall (opposite the 'club'). For the
Sunday’s outing we will
meet at No. 139 at 9.30 a.m. Bring lunch and plenty of water. Saturday
24th April. A return visit
to Mr. D. Hatendi’s property - Charmwood, ±7 kms from Chisipite
on the Enterprise Road. Meet at 2.30pm. Sunday
25th April. There will
be a special tree planting ceremony in memory of Lyn Mullin in
the grounds of The Forestry Commission,
Orange Grove Drive in Highlands.
The ceremony starts at 2.30pm after which tea will be served.
Everyone will be very welcome, and it will be possible
to purchase a copy of Lyn’s beautiful book “Historic Trees of
Zimbabwe” Saturday
1st May. Observe May Day with Tom Muller when he leads
the first of the winter
time walks this Saturday morning. Sunday
16th May. ‘Natural
Riches of the Eastern Districts’ - presented by the Aloe and Cactus
Society in the educational centre of the Botanic Gardens.
Starting at 8.00am and covering many subjects with some
well known speakers. For bookings and further information tel:
884003 or 747218 or 339175. Sunday 9th or 23rd May. A.G.M. at Thetford Estate, Christon Bank.
Please note that the date will be set in due course. NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL
MEETING
Notice is hereby given that the
54th Annual
General Meeting of the Tree Society of Zimbabwe will be held at
Thetford Estate, Christon Bank on a date to be advised. Any proposals/resolutions and nominations for office bearers should be forwarded to P O Box 2128, Harare by Monday 3rd May if possible, although proposals and nominations will be accepted from the floor. AGENDA 1. Notice convening the meeting. 2. Apologies. 3. Minutes of the 53rd A.G.M. 4. Matters Arising. 5. Chairman's Report. 6. Treasurer's Report. 7. Election of Committee Members. 8. Any Other Business. Saturday
29th May. Mark’s Walk. MATABELELAND
CALENDAR
Nothing has been
arranged for April. BOTANIC
GARDEN WALK: 6
JANUARY 2004 Tom’s subject for
today was the Annonaceae. This is a small, but interesting, family
in Zimbabwe consisting mainly of woody plants. What are the features
of the family? Ours are trees, shrubs or woody climbers (sometimes
very large lianes as in Artabotrys);
rarely they can be a suffrutex with stems that die back each year,
as in Annona stenophylla subsp. nana. The leaves have
a number of distinguishing features. Firstly they are alternate,
with an “angle of divergence” of 180º. On other words, they form
a flat plane. In addition, crushing the leaves usually produces
an aroma – a gentle medicinal smell. Furthermore, the leaves are
entire and there are no stipules. Confusion is possible
with certain Euphorbiaceae which can also have alternate leaves
in a plane, but there is never the smell in the crushed leaf and
stipules are present in the Euphorbiaceae (but may fall off quickly). The flowering parts
are usually in multiples of 3: i.e. 3 sepals and usually 6 petals.
The stamens are numerous. The fruits consist usually of several
free elongated lobes – think for example of Friesodielsia
– but in some species these are solidly fused together to make
one apparent fruit (Monodora). Firstly, the genus
Xylopia was looked
at. There are three species in Zimbabwe: two are forest species:
aethiopica and parviflora
(formerly holstii) occurring only in the eastern districts and
the other one, X. odoratissima, is a plant of the Kalahari
sand in the NW. X. aethiopica is an extremely tall forest
tree. Tom reported that he was able to find seed of this species
by following the scent. As was to be expected the leaves were
arranged in one plane and, typical of forest trees, had long drip
tips. X. parviflora is a tree of drier forests than aethiopica. Typically
it has branches arranged horizontally; it is in fact a deciduous
tree, but its leaf change is very fast. X.
odoratissima is a lovely little tree occurring in Kalahari
sand. A small genus is
Monanthotaxis with two species. Monanthotaxis chasei is a climber with
very glaucous leaves beneath. The leaves are also obovate and
again are aromatic when crushed. The species is quite widespread
in medium and low altitude forests. Monanthotaxis
buchananii is a very rare species in Zimbabwe and has been
found only once, in the Burma Valley. After these rare
trees we don’t often see, it was a pleasure to look at two we
do. Friesodielsia obovata was on full flower,
showing off its parts in threes. Tom remarked that this was one
of the nicest wild fruits to eat. Hexalobus
monopetalus also has edible fruits. Although a lowveld species
it does attain higher altitudes and we see it quite often around
the Harare area. Cleistochlamys kirkii is a component of the jesse in
the Zambezi Valley. It grows on sandstone hillsides in areas where
the soil is a bit deeper. Again this had annonaceous characteristics:
leaves aromatic, in one plane and with no stipules. Then
on to two species of Artabotrys. Artabotrys brachypetalus
is a powerful climber, typically scrambling in the vegetation
by lowveld rivers. The fruits are a striking blackish-blue. The
plant itself bears remarkable hooks which are strangely angled
are really persistent flower peduncles. Artabotrys monteiroae is a similar plant, bearing similar
hooks, but occurs in the eastern districts in low to medium altitude
forest. The
last native species seen was the extraordinary Monodora junodii.
It was the wrong time of year to see the strange blackish-purple
flowers, but we had seen them on the walk in November. The fruits
are simple. more or less spherical and have a hard coat; the faint
presence of 6 sides to the fruit suggesting that it was composed
of fused parts “in threes”. Finally
we stopped in the “cultivated plants” section and looked at Annona muricata
from the W. Indies. This has various names: graviola, prickly
custard-apple. This has thickly 3-lobed flowers which appear on
the old wood and also extraordinary prickly fruits. Once
again, it was a fascinating evening and I would like to thank
Tom for his time and trouble. Mark Hyde
DOMBOSHAWA: 15 FEBRUARY 2004 Domboshawa is one of my favourite
places. Tree Society outings take us there on average twice a
year and it is a source of never-failing botanical interest. Even
in mid-winter when the vegetation retreats into shades of grey
and brown and the seepage zones dry up, plants are still to be
found and it has a strange beauty. At this time of
year, in February with the rainy season under way and the seepage
zones running with water, it is absolutely at its best. The first tree of
interest was a common one, namely the mahobohobo, Uapaca kirkiana. The trees in the car park were spectacularly in flower;
I’ve never seem them look so striking with a broad “cuff” of flowers
on the wood below the apical tuft of leaves. As with all Euphorbiaceae,
the flowers were unisexual and it was very easy, as the flowers
are quite large, to detect which were male and which female. I had thought that
the Uapaca was dioecious, that is with male and female flowers
on separate trees, so that some trees produce fruit and others
do not at all. However, at least one tree clearly had a mixture
of both male and female flowers in different parts of the same
tree. The position is obviously more complex than I had thought. We paid our entrance
fee and headed up the rocks looking at the plants which make Domboshawa
so distinctive. Everywhere were the wiry tufts of Coleochloa setifera (Cyperaceae), a grass-like
sedge whose leaves on top of bare rock can create a slippery effect.
Also very common is the finger-staining shrub, Plectranthus sanguineus. Everywhere in the
wetter places was the golden-yellow heads of Emilia brachycephala, a rather local plant generally, but here quite
common. Also, the trailing stems and pretty small white flowers
of Cyphia reducta, another common plant at
Domboshawa. Cyphia is related to Lobelia; it has the same asymmetric
flowers, but cyphias trail or climb whereas our lobelias do not. We headed upwards
and over to the right, round the hill about a quarter of the way.
Another striking herb was Pentas
nobilis which has exceptionally long white corollas. This
is a Rubiaceae and has leaves opposite or in whorls with the usual
stipules typical of the family. Trees were a bit limited in this
open rocky environment but we did see Hymenodictyon floribundum (the Fire bush) quite commonly and came across a fine
specimen of the Granite Garcinia, Garcinia
buchananii. As we rounded a
corner on a contour, we came across the single flowers of the
very pretty Oxalis obliquifolia. There was also a
solitary Sterculia quinqueloba
in a typical rocky habitat, displaying its large leaves. Eventually we headed
up the slope towards the summit and stopped to explore a patch
of vegetation. Here there was a good quantity of bracken (Pteridium aquilinum), which is quite common at Domboshawa as well
as Syzygium guineense
subsp. afromontanum, which is the more Eastern
districts subspecies with darker green leaves and a longer drip-tip.
Also present was Olinia
vanguerioides, another higher rainfall species. From this point
on, up to the beacon, we were mostly in lichen country and flowering
plants were notably absent. I took a picture of the group on the
summit and we then headed downwards towards the main cave. Finally, on the
way back down, we stopped at some large granite boulders and looked
at the colonies of Streptocarpus
pumilus in the shade of the rocks. These were in full flower
and are very attractive in their quiet unassuming way. Once again, it was
an interesting visit to Domboshawa. We look forward to many more
of them. Mark Hyde
PALMS
Extracted from and acknowledged
with thanks to the magazine of the Albany
Museum. R.S.A. “The Phoenix” April 1994. Vol 7.No 1. Phoenix
– the Date Palm genus. By Estell Brink
The perception that Carl von
Linné gave names to all the known plant species when he published
his Species Plantarum in 1753 is quite erroneous.
What he did was to devise a system of botanical order which
grouped like plants together into families, genera and species
and most of the time he simply applied the names that had already
been in current use within this framework.
No one knew better than Linnaeus the luminous quality of
words, especially of names, and even when plants were so '‘new'’
that no published descriptions existed he searched for a vernacular
name to Latinize into his formal system. But for ‘Phoenix’ there was
no such need for here indeed was a word as old as the language
of the ancient Greeks that actually meant ‘palm-tree’.
For the Greeks the word also had the connotation of ‘red’
as in the rising sun which, from their vantage point, came to
be applied to the country that called itself Canaan which lay
to the east of Greece. The
Phoenicians
Canaan extended along the eastern
seaboard of the Mediterranean from the mountains of Amanus to
Mount Carmel in the south. Bounded
inland by the mountains of Lebanon, it was a dry and rocky country
not fit for agriculture but blessed with date palms and great
forests of cedars. Before them lay the blue expanse of the Mediterranean
and it takes no great leap of imagination to realise that the
innovative and gifted Semitic race who lived there had no choice
but to apply their skills to boat-building and trading.
Their initial stock in trade could have been little more
than timber, dates and the dye they extracted, drop by precious
royal purple drop, from the small murex shell-fish on their coast.
They were the first to sail out of sight of land into every
part of the Mediterranean and even out into the Atlantic to Gaul
and Britain to obtain metals for their craftsmen.
With iron and tin from these countries, gold and silver
from Spain, copper from Cyprus, pearls from the East, perfumes
and spices from Arabia, fine linen from Egypt and lion and leopard
skins from Africa, they expanded their trade. And where they dropped anchor along the European
and North African coasts and on the many Mediterranean islands,
they established trading posts building up a colonial empire which
included Cyprus, Malta, Sicily, Sardinia, Marseilles, Spain and
later Carthage. The downfall and disappearance
in 1400 BC of the mysterious Minoans who were their only real
competitors on the open seas left the Phoenicians in control of
the waves and they were able to take a place alongside
the great civilisations of Egypt and Mesopotamia.
Their cities, Tyre and Sidon, Tripolis and Byblos dominated
the development of Western civilisation as we know it for the
next millenium. Even after the great island fortress of Tyre
fell to the Assyrians in 666 BC this was not the end of the Phoenicians. They retreated to their city state of Carthage
in North Africa and for the next five centuries their skill and
ability as shipwrights and sailors was sought after by one foreign
power after another. It
is even possible that these master mariners circumnavigated Africa
2000 years before Diaz and da Gama. Pharoah Necho II sent a Phoenician fleet to
find a route around Africa in 600 BC.
Whether they succeeded or not is still a matter of debate
as no contemporary documents have yet been found to provide uncontrovertable
evidence. Most of our information about
the Phoenicians is at second hand either through the Bible or
various Greek and Roman historians but there is no doubt that
they exerted a strong influence on the Mediterranean cultures.
From them the Greeks learnt the arts of sculpture and working
in metals. Their alphabet
of 22 letters has become the basis for our depiction of speech
and the use of metal coins as legal tender in trading became generally
accepted. The
Resurrection Bird
The Date Palm had an influence
on the imagination too. The
story of the resurrection bird, the phoenix, was first retold
by Herodotus in 430BC. He
had been shown illustrations of it hen he visited the City of
the Sun (Heliopolis) in Egypt and as it was often pictured nesting
in the top of a palm he used the name of the tree, phoenix for the bird as well. The myth is one that threads
its way through both Eastern and Western mythologies. In the far East the myth of the feng-hwang closely parallels
that of the phoenix although the Eastern myth tells of a pair
of birds. According to
Herodotus the phoenix was the only one of its kind and lived in
Arabia. About the size of an eagle with dazzling plumage
of purple and gold or red, gold and blue it had a life-span of
about 500 years. When
it felt its end drawing near it built a pyre of sweet spices on
which it sat singing a song of rare beauty.
Then the rays of the sun ignited this next and consumed
the bird in flames. From the ashes a worm would arise which developed into the new phoenix.
Its first task was to take its parent’s ashes wrapped in
a ball of myrrh and fly to Heliopolis on the Nile accompanied
by a throng of birds. There
the priests of the Temple of the Sun received the remains with
great ceremony. The old
phoenix was buried in the temple before the new phoenix returned
to Arabia to repeat the cycle of life, death and resurrection.
It had the reputation of being a bird of good omen and
many a ruler and politician capitalised on the myth to persuade
the populace that they were indeed the elect of the gods. Every myth has a grain of reality
or truth. Lost in the
mists of time there was surely a real, shy, lonely, vegetarian
raptor on the verge of extinction even before the rise of the
Egyptian Empire which nested in the date palms just as today we
still have Gypohierax, the palm-nut vulture, which nests in the
raffia and oil palms of Zululand and East Africa. A
pivot of culture
The plant genus Phoenix consists of 10 – 12 species and
all of them originate in the Old World – Asia, Arabia and Africa. Classically graceful and easy to cultivate,
they have been planted in gardens worldwide or cultivated in plantations
for their fruit. The species
hybridize easily and this has caused a proliferation of horticultural
names for the many different forms and varieties that have arisen
in this way. Phoenix dactylifera, the date palm, occurs naturally in the valleys of
the Tigris and Euphrates in Arabia and along the Nile but has
also been actively cultivated by the Arabs living in these regions
for well over 5000 years. The
vital life-support its sweet nutritional fruits afforded the nomadic
tribes of these arid semi-desert countries, played a det4ermining
role in the formation of settlements which eventually became the
great cities and centres of civilisation of the ancient world.
The Western style civilisation which dominates world order
today traces its origins to these lands. Its laws and concepts of civic order, its philosophies
of right and wrong, good and evil are based on the writings of
the ancient Hebrews, Persians and Phoenicians whose strong influence
on the Greek and Roman civilisations which followed cannot be
underestimated and the whole course of human development would
have taken a different direction had it not been for the centripetal
force exerted by those early groves of date palms on wandering
bands of shepherds and goatherds.
The deep shade cast by their thick canopies provided relief
from the relentless sun not only to people but also to other plants
and it was at their feet that man’s early attempts at agriculture
were successful. Like the rest of the genus,
the flowers of Phoenix dactylifera are unisexual and are borne on separate
male and female plants. In
the wild state they rely on wind for pollination and the copious
pollen is carried for long distances.
In cultivation, good husbandry takes over from the wind
and it is the usual practice to tie parts of male inflorescences
to the female inflorescences to ensure pollination and a good
crop. Only one male plant
is needed for every 50 female plants.
In the many Middle Eastern wars in history, the destruction
of the male plants of the date plantations ranked with rape and
the pillaging of villages as one of the most vindictive and barbaric
acts perpetrated by the victors over the vanquished.
The immediacy and horror of Operation Desert Storm, fresh
in everyone’s memory as the first war fought live in our living
rooms on television, probably did more damage to the world’s date
basket (already in the 1950’s Iraq was supplying more than 75%
of the world’s needs) than all these ancient wars put together. Date trees start bearing fruit
in their third year and reach their prime at 30 years. They live to a great age and are productive
for up to two centuries. Each
tree bears about 100kg of dates per annum in 8 – 10 bunches of
fruits. The yields can in some cases be a s high as
200kg per tree. Export
dates are harvested from the top of the tree while the lower branches
provide for local consumption and are usually eaten in the soft
fresh state. Dates for export are either completely sun-dried
and can keep indefinitely, or semi-dried and packed loosely in
boxes where they keep without fermenting.
The percentage of sugar in the dry dates is much higher
than in the fresh ripe fruit.
The millions of hectares of date trees grown along the
rivers of Middle eastern countries still supply most of the world’s
dates and the most sought after variety is the Deglet Noor. On a smaller scale, date plantations have been
successfully cultivated in southern Australia, California, Mexico
and on the banks of the Orange River in South Africa. Date palm leaves are usually
grey-green and fairly stiff and the trees grow to 30 – 40m in
height. In their native countries the wood is used
to build huts and houses. Fibre
from the base of the leaves is used for making ropes and baskets
and, mixed with camelhair, is woven into cloth which is used for
caravan tents. Of all the species of Phoenix
only the date palm produces such good fruit. The wild date of India, Phoenix sylvestris, is cultivated chiefly
for its sap which yields sugar and ‘toddy’ or palm wine. The trees are tapped from the time they attain
about 4ft in height. A
notch is made near the top of the stem and each tree yields 70
to 80 litres of sap per annum for the next 20 to 25 years.
In this way each tree can produce about four kilograms
of sugar per annum and thousands of tonnes of date sugar is produced
annually in Bengal alone. Most familiar of all the palm
in South Africa is Phoenix reclinata which occurs as far
south as the Kariega river. Its
distribution is widespread and it occurs all the way up the eastern
coast of Africa to Egypt. The
fruits are much smaller than those of the true date palm and are
sparsely covered by pulp but are not unlike the true dates in
flavour. They are relished
by monkeys which have played a major part in their distribution.
Steeped in water, the sweet fruits are often used to make
a refreshing drink. The plants with their bright green, flexuous,
curved leaves make decorative garden subjects and have been cultivated
all over the world especially in gardens in the USA Phoenix canariensis is probably the
most favoured horticulturally of all the species. The trees are very tall, elegant and single-stemmed and make excellent
feature plants in lawns or in avenues along street verges. They have dense crowns of light green curving
leaves and the species is one of the fastest growers in Phoenix. The Chinese Dwarf Phoenix,
Phoenix
roebeliniim, grows less than 1m high and the leaves measure
about 30cm in length. It
is a dainty little palm best suited to semi-shady spots in the
garden and is regarded as the most graceful of the small palms
used in indoor decoration. This then is Phoenix, prince
of palm genera which has given its name to a nation and to a universal
myth. Multi-facetted in
its interaction with the tribes of mankind, an integral part of
the chain of history, with a multitude of uses from food and drink,
clothing and shelter to purest aesthetic beauty. BOTANIC GARDEN WALK: 3 FEBRUARY 2004 Slightly unusually, two families,
namely the Verbenaceae and the Lamiaceae (Labiatae), were on the
agenda at the Botanic Garden walk. In the traditional delimitation
of these families, the Verbenaceae had most of the woody plants
whereas Lamiaceae was a family of mainly herbs. Fairly recent
taxonomic changes have resulted in some dramatic transfers from
Verbenaceae to Lamiaceae with the following genera moving: Clerodendrum,
Karomia, Premna and Vitex. At the same time,
a number of clerodendrums have been split off into an unfamiliar-named
genus Rotheca and in other cases their taxonomic
rank has changed (what was once a species has become a subspecies
etc.). This leaves Verbenaceae
with very few woody plants and those mostly shrubs, namely: Duranta, Lantana and Lippia. Both families have
leaves which are opposite or whorled (there are very few exceptions),
mostly simple (but of course Vitex has palmate leaves). The flowers
have petals fused in a tube and are usually asymmetric, frequently
being 2-lipped with the lower lip prominent. Stamens number 2
or 4. The ovary is superior and the fruit may be a drupe or consist
of 2-4 nutlets. Our first species
was Karomia tettensis,
a species of the jesse. Older members will probably know it as
Holmskioldia tettensis.
This species has leaves which are obovate and also deeply serrate
with the serrations largest and most irregular in shape near to
the leaf apex. The leaves have a slight smell when crushed - not
strong but somewhat unpleasant. The young branchlets are typically
lenticellate. Perhaps the plant's
most distinctive feature are the conical "chinese-hat"-like
bracts which enclose the flowers. On next to the genus
Tetradenia. The commonest
species is Tetradenia riparia
(formerly Iboza riparia)
which has thick, opposite and decussate leaves with prominent
rounded teeth. It is a well-known species, usually occurring in
rocky places and flowering in the winter. A rarer species
is Tetradenia brevispicata.
I have never seen this. Tom commented that this is a very striking
and easily recognisable species. He has seen it at Ngezi siding.
In addition to this there is a "species no. 1" which
was recorded from the Botanical Garden extension and a further
species in the Eastern districts. On to the genus
Vitex and specifically Vitex doniana. This is a tree with large
smooth palmate leaves with 5 leaflets. It makes a beautiful shade
tree and Tom remembers camping under one in 1967 on Gorongosa
Mountain with Hiram Wild and Blake Goldsmith. The leaves were
rather high up and difficult to reach but despite Tom’s exhortations,
none of the Tree Society ladies was willing to risk the climb
– regular attenders will know that Tom believes that the Tree
Society always asks its female members to do the difficult climbs.
In Zimbabwe it is a plant of low altitudes in the Eastern Highlands.
Tom also remarked that it is probably the biggest species of Vitex. Vitex ferruginea (formerly V. amboniensis)
is a very rare vitex indeed, which Tom has only definitely seen
on the Nyoni Mountain. It has delicate leaves and occurs in higher
rainfall outliers. Tom thinks he may also have seen it to the
south of the Zimbabwe ruins (also another outlier) where it occurred
as an understorey in high rainfall Brachystegia woodland. Vitex payos is of course a very familiar
species which we see frequently around Harare. Again, the fruit
are edible (tasting of chocolate?), it has 3-5 leaflets and a
distinctive bark with very fine fissures. The habitat is usually
rocky places. Vitex schliebenii (for a long time this was
known as sp. no. 2) has attractive white flowers which were out
on this date. It has edible fruits and occurs in E Africa and
in the Chirinda Forest. Clerodendrum eriophyllum (hairy leaves) is the name
we are no using for Clerodendrum glabrum. As it is usually hairy, eriophyllum is a
better name. This has a strong, unpleasant smell and opposite
or whorled leaves. It’s habitat shows wide variation – Tom commented
it was not typical of any association. In the same forest
section as the Vitex doniana, we came across the spiny stems of
Clerodendrum cephalanthum subsp. swynnertonii,
formerly called Clerodendrum
swynnertonii, one of those changes of
rank referred to earlier. The spines are the hardened leaf petioles
and these act to support the plant. Crushing the leaves produced
a faint odour, nothing much compared to the strongly stinking
nature of the common ones around Harare. As an aside, it is interesting
that the leaves of the commonly-planted exotic species of Clerodendrum thomsoniae has no smell at
all, so it appears that it is not a characteristic of the genus
worldwide, as it seems to be in Zimbabwe. Out of Clerodendrum
has come Rotheca and
we saw two species of this new genus. Rotheca
myricoides and R. wildii.
R. wildii
has larger leaves which are hairless and often highly fleshy,
almost succulent. It occurs in woodland rocky places. R. myricoides has hairy
leaves. Mark
Hyde COMMITTEE MEMBERS’ CONTACT
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Hyde
Cell 091233751 Terry
Fallon Adele
Hamilton Ritchie Eva
Keller Office 610029/33 Maureen
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