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TREE
SOCIETY OF ZIMBABWE
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June 2004 JOURNAL
OF THE TREE LIFE Annual subs are now overdue.
Prompt payment would be appreciated. $5000 for Tree Life by email
or $10000 by post. MASHONALAND CALENDARSaturday
5TH June. Botanic Garden Walk. Meet in
the car park at 10.45am for 11.
Sunday 20th
June Our outing this month is to the home of Helen and Albert
Grey near Darwendale Directions. To get there, take the Bulawayo
Road and (after c.45 kms)
turn right towards Norton town. After a short distance
(probably less than 1 km) turn left. This road takes you past
the police station, Boma
Butchery etc. Eventually, the road becomes the Robert
Gabriel Mugabe Highway and there is a sign at the side of
the road announcing that
fact. Shortly after the sign, turn right (this road
goes to National Parks and ZIPAM). After about 4 kms, turn
right again and then left; we are visiting Plot no. 10. The total distance from Harare is around
75 kms. Please bring your lunch and your
chair. We will meet at 9.30am Mr & Mrs Grey can be reached
on cell phone numbers 091 200890
or 091 200891 Saturday 26th June. Mark's walk will be at the home of Dr Peter Iliff
at 7, Ernie's Lane, Monavale. To get there, start at the intersection
of Quendon Rd and West Rd and head westwards along Quendon,
towards the Italian Club. Before you reach the Italian
Club, take the first road to the left which is Lyndhurst Rd
(no sign unfortunately!). Proceed along Lyndhurst and you
will come to a fork; take the right-hand fork onto Earnie’s
Lane and proceed to No.
7 which is at the end of the road. Dr. Iliff has requested ‘no dogs please’. Saturday 3rd July. Bot Garden Walk. Tom will be away for the next three months but Meg
Coates Palgrave has kindly offered to lead some of the walks
in his absence. Sunday 18th July. Monthly all day outing to Pleasant Valley. We hope to make a return visit to this interesting
farm. Saturday 24th
July. Mark’s Walk – Ruwa Scout Park MATABELELAND CALENDARNothing has
been arranged for
June. BOTANIC GARDEN WALK: 6 APRIL 2004
The main subject of the evening was the Sapotaceae. The features of this family are as follows: §
woody
plants; §
a
mainly tropical distribution; §
milky
latex (sometimes reluctantly produced); §
leaves
simple and entire; §
leaves
arranged spirally (and often obovate); §
young
leaves and stems have brownish hairs; (this is very characteristic); §
stipules
rarely present; §
flowers
actinomorphic and bisexual; §
fruits
fleshy and indehiscent and (as Tom remarked) often edible. World-wide there are 975 species in 53 genera (per
Mabberley). Many have edible fruits (e.g. the sapote of the
W. Indies), produce oils or timber and some are the source
of gutta-percha. Our first tree was Manilkara concolor. This is a rare species in Zimbabwe, Tom disclosed
that it was found in Gona-re-Zhou in a dry stream south of
the Runde River. This species has more or less concolorous
leaves (i.e. the colour is the same on both sides). However,
we later saw Manilkara
discolor. This species has very markedly discolorous leaves
which are silvery-grey beneath and glossy dark green above;
a very striking combination. M. discolor
occurs in forest outliers (e.g. Murahwa’s Hill) and
forest edges and it can be a very large tree, attaining 50
metres. On to the genus Mimusops.
The first tree we looked at was labelled Mimusops
obtusifolia, but Tom explained that there is some doubt
about this and it may simply be the common M. zeyheri. M.
obtusifolia is another rather local species in Zimbabwe,
having been recorded from the Eastern and Southern divisions
of Zimbabwe. It also occurs quite widely in other parts of
Africa. None of the 3 species mentioned so far in this write-up
have been seen by me in the wild – thus suggesting that they
are not particularly common. The next species, however, Mimusops zeyheri, is a well-known tree of riverine forest and rocky
hills. It has glossy dark green leaves and is usually evergreen.
It has the typical brown-hairiness of the Sapotaceae. Although
it produces milk, it may not do so on occasions and this can
be confusing. Conceivably it could be confused with trees
in the Moraceae (e.g. a species of fig) but the Mimusops lacks
stipules. Sideroxylon inerme
is primarily a coastal species occurring on dunes but it does
also occur inland and just reaches Zimbabwe in the extreme
SE where it occurs on anthills in Gona-re-Zhou. It has the
typical brown-hairiness of the family. Ours is subsp. diospyroides, which implies it should
resemble a Diospyros, which I think it actually does. Another
feature of this species is that it flowers and fruits on the
old wood. Pouteria adolfi-friedericii (formerly in the genus Aningeria) is extremely rare in Zimbabwe, occurring
only in the Honde valley in the forest at the base of the
Mtarazi Falls. There, however, it is the main tree and has
extremely large buttresses. Once again, the rustiness of the
leaves was clearly visible. Inhambanella
henriquesii
is another very rare Zimbabwean tree (again, a wide distribution
in Africa). Although not confined to it, it does occur in
the Chirinda Forest where it can be found by its striking
red flush of its young leaves. The leaves are crowded at the
apex of the branches and are obovate. The species has a large,
edible fruit. On next to the two species of Chrysophyllum. C. gorungosanum
is the main tree (with Craibia
brevicaudata) of Chirinda Forest, attaining 50 metres.
It is also quite widespread in the eastern Highlands. It has
narrow, obovate leaves with a distinctly silvery underside
and brownish indumentum. Chrysophyllum
viridifolium,
on the other hand, is much rarer, occurring in Chirinda Forest
only. We barely had time to look at this as night was falling
fast and it was specially dark in the forest sections. It
has a much smaller leaf which is shiny and green; it doesn’t
look like a typical Sapotaceae. Pachystela brevipes
has a trunk with many flutes. Once again we saw the milky
latex and obovate leaves. Like the Sideroxylon it also exhibits
cauliflory, bearing its flowers on the old wood. It is interesting that so many of the species we saw
in this family are very local in Zimbabwe; so many seem to
be confined to one or two of our Eastern Districts forests
or just reach Zimbabwe in the south and east. Once again, our thanks go to Tom for his inspiring
guidance. Mark Hyde MAZVIKADEI DAM, BANKET: 18 APRIL 2004 Our April outing was a relatively long-distance one
to Mazvikadei Dam, near Banket. We assembled at the sumptuous
R Davies cottage, the use of which we had obtained through
Adele, and then drove round to the dam wall, an area of interest
which we had recce’d the day before. On the way, we stopped by a line of trees adjacent
to the road to have a look at a specimen of Thevetia peruviana. This is a very commonly-planted garden plant with
dark green glossy linear leaves and large-ish yellow flowers;
Harare gardens are absolutely full of it. It is an Apocynaceae
and is therefore milky but unlike most of our native species
the leaves are arranged spirally. The question as to whether it ever escapes into the
wild is difficult to answer. If I recall correctly, Bob Drummond
had recorded it on his list of weeds and we have seen it growing
in riverine forest by the Angwa River looking very well naturalised.
At this site, it was hard to tell – it looked naturalised
but it was growing along a roadside and could easily have
been planted by some owner in the past. At the same spot, some other species caught our eye,
namely a fine fruiting specimen of Pericopsis
angolensis and
Acacia amethythophylla with its flowers arranged in large panicles. At the dam wall we parked up in the top car-park and
looked at the trees below while admiring the view over the
Dam. The altitude of Mazvikadei is noticeably lower than Harare;
for example the dam wall is at about 1175 m. The trees are
therefore somewhat different as we were to see. On the road down to the dam someone cleverly spotted
Ochna gambleoides. This is a small tree with greyish leaves, each
with the typical Ochna characteristic of a raised mid-vein
above. An overall quick impression, as has been remarked before,
is of Protea angolensis. The bark was rough with occasional
transverse slits. This is always quite an exciting find. In Zimbabwe
it is confined to the northern division and we have seen it
occasionally on outings to this area. Flora Zambesiaca says
it is on rocky hills, which was certainly correct here, and
it is said to occur only in small quantities. Again, this
was supported by our only seeing this one specimen. The name
incidentally means “like Ochna gamblei”. Another plant seen at this point was Olax dissitiflora, a species of riverine
areas and rocky hills. We tried crushing the leaves to smell
the typical almond smell and noticed again how there appears
to be a delay between the crushing and the onset of the smell
– does some reaction have to take place first? We next walked along the dam wall to the point where
it meets the steep side of a rocky hill. This area of rocky
boulders had, I suspect, copious water, perhaps as a result
of the dam and perhaps also because of run-off from the rocks.
Here was the most interesting botanical part of the day. Here were the deeply veined leaves of Strychnos potatorum, a typical species
of riverine and rocky places. In the deep shade was the little
sensitive plant, Biophytum
abyssinicum. It has pinnate leaves; when the leaflets
are touched they quickly fold downwards on either side of
the rhachis. The leaves have the largest leaflets at the end
and they vaguely resemble Msasa leaves; they are also very
thin and delicate, which is one character separating the species
from the other species of Biophytum, namely petersianum. Also in the dense woodland (almost forest) , in the
understorey, was Erythrococca
trichogyne. This can be a bit anonymous in appearance
when it is not fruiting but the leaf shape and general appearance
are fairly easy to recognise. Also present was Albizia tanganyicensis, a tree of rocky places, with its striking almost white
bark. On the edge of the woodland grew three interesting
species. Firstly the climber Solanecio
angulatus with
its greyish, pinnatifid leaves and panicles of small yellow
flowers was common. I’ve always thought of this as quite rare,
but having seen it quite a bit lately, I’m beginning to wonder. Also sprawling over rocks and other vegetation was
a Hippocratea parvifolia.
The distinctive flattened pods of this species (in threes)
were present as also were tendril-like structures formed by
the stems and the very tiny brownish flowers. Another attractive weed was Catharanthus roseus (the Madagascar periwinkle). This species readily
escapes, many at medium and lower altitudes, and may be abundant
by roadsides. This is another Apocynaceae but the leaves are
opposite in this case. All in all, it was a very interesting morning’s walk. A return visit at a different time of year would be very nice. Mark Hyde PALMS
Extracted from and acknowledged with thanks to the magazine of the Albany Museum. R.S.A. “The Phoenix” August 1994. Vol. 7.No 1. A CAVALCADE OF COCONUTS (Continued). By
Estelle Brink
Fill the Horns. The genus Elaeis
has an unusual distribution.
It consists of only two species, Elaeis guineensis of tropical West
Africa and Elaeis oleifera of the Amazonian lowlands in South America.
The name is derived from the Greek word for olive,
elaeon, and there
is an obvious connection between its bunches of oil-bearing
fruits and those of the Mediterranean oleas. In spite of the vivid visionary imaginations of men
like Pharoah Neccho who sent a Phoenician fleet around Africa
in 600 BC and the daring exploits of Hanno the Carthaginian
in 500 BC who sailed past the Saharan Cape Bojador to the
mouth of the Senegal establishing seven trading colonies on
the way, Africa remained terra incognito until the time of
a new visionary, Prince Henry the Navigator.
European man was held in the thrall of a belief that
he was destined to be confined to an area between the Northern
Frigid Zone and the Torrid Zone, an uninhabited Hell where
the sun passed so close to the sea and the land that the former
boiled and latter was on fire.
This Zone started somewhere around Cape Bojador and
their fears were in
no way allayed by Hanno's’ reports of his sighting of Mt.
Cameroun or Kakulimo in the volcanic range at the eastern
end of the Gulf of Guinea which he called ‘the chariot of
the Gods’ or the Arab
geographers who marked out the ‘Green Sea of Darkness’, a
fearful area of perpetual fog and contrary currents from which,
once entered, there was no return. It needed a spur.
In 1415 an expedition against the Moorish seaport Ceuta
was successful and the pirates who has pestered shipping through
the Straits of Gibraltar were brought under control.
Portugal hoped to take over as a bonus the rich caravan
trade in gold dust from the interior of Africa.
But this failed and the caravans simply followed another
route visiting other Moorish cities. And so there emerged another purpose. To discover for themselves from which parts
of Africa the merchandise, particularly the gold dust, emanated. In 1432 Gil Eannes, Henry’s shield-bearer, broke the
spell when he sailed past the sinister coast of Cape Non (where
the sea itself is so red with desert sand that tracks of the
vessels remain visible for days and the ships themselves are
discoloured red) and reached Cape Bojador. In 1435-36 Afonso Baldaya reached the Rio de Oro just
north of Cape Blanco and in 1441 Ant o Goncalves made history
when he brought back to Lisbon gold dust and a number of Senegalese
negro slaves. The way was opened to a Portuguese empire and a new
tribulation was added to the lot of the long-suffering indigenous
people of Africa for now they not only had to contend with
the long-established Muslim trade in human beings from the
interior but had to face the same threat from the Christians
who came in from the sea.
Our 20th century morality may well cringe
in horror at the mention of slavery but we ought to remember
that since the dawn of time a large proportion of mankind
in every country of the world lived their lives as slaves
whether as the utterly rightless servus
in the Roman Empire or the serfs who were inherited with the
soil in feudal Europe. What
made this enslavement so disgusting and abhorrent was the
perversion of Christianity that it represented for it was
ordered by the Church of Rome as a ‘Crusade’ and took place
under the mantle of the saving of souls from the Infidel. By 1461 the Grain, Ivory and Gold Coasts had been discovered
as far as Elmina just short of Accra and Lagos which later
became the oil seaports of Africa.
But it was only in 1650 that the botanist Bauhin penned
the first accurate description of Elaeis
quineensis. The trunks are up to 10 m high and are coarsely and
deeply ringed. The
leaves like those of the coconut are pinnately divided into
50 – 60 leaflets and can be up to 3m long.
The flowers are unisexual and are borne on separate
inflorescences where they are sunken in deep pits in the branches
of the spadices. The
fruits are red, about the size of plums and borne in large
clusters and the palm oil of commerce is obtained from the
fleshy seed coat as well as from the kernel. The African Oil palm fruit contains 45-48% of palm
oil in its fleshy coat and another 56% of palm kernel oil
in the endosperm of the seed – the whole fruit provides oil.
Coconut oil derives only from the kernel. As a tropical tree crop it bears fruit almost continuously in large
dense bunches and is not just the most efficient oil producing
palm but the most efficient of all the oil-producing plants. But, until fairly recently, it was exploited only in
West Africa from wild or semi-wild trees.
About 100 years ago, that most efficient institution
for the industrialisation of the colonies and the upliftment
of its peoples, the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, took an
interest in this age-old provider of oil used in Africa for
everything from butter and cooking fat to the anointing of
babies and bodies and, exported for revenue to England, for
making soap, candles and for use in South Wales in the preparation
of tin plate (the non-drying oil preserved the surface of
heated iron sheets from oxidation). Following the active interest of Kew, plantations
were planted in Borneo and the species is now cultivated in
a broad band across Africa and down its east-coast. The description of the rural manufacturing process
in the Kew Bulletin on 1892 conjures up biblical scenes of
whole villages working together.
The chief flowering period in Lagos is during the months
of September and October. Four or five months later when the cold dry
Harmattan blows from the desert, the fruits can be harvested. The waterways fill with flotillas of trading
canoes and the lagoon shores glow with fires.
Hoarse songs and the shouts of natives at work sound
throughout the night. The
fruit that was gathered by climbing the trees with a rope
harness is piled in a heap and covered with a thin layer of
palm, leaves and left for 4-10 days to ferment. When the fruits become loose they are removed
by hand and collected in baskets and the oil extraction process
can begin. The first step is boiling for about two hours in large
earthenware pots which can hold 11 gallons of water. As soon as the fruits are softened they are
strained in baskets and piled into a canoe which has been
hauled up out of the water for this purpose.
Now the mashing can begin and men stamp heavily to
and fro with a curious twisting motion of their feet to separate
the pericarp from the kernels. In only 45 minutes three men can process 22 cwt of fruits. About a third of the length of the canoe is now dammed
off, cold water is poured into it and the fibre is swished
around, separated from the kernels, thoroughly squeezed and
thrown aside into baskets.
All this time water is ladled up and poured rapidly
from a height out of calabashes into the canoe and the remaining
fibre is separated from the kernels and sieved out by sidelong
blows of a small basket.
Soon the water becomes covered in a greenish yellow
scum containing the oil which is skimmed off into floating
calabashes. The fibre
that has been removed is beat4en in a mortar and washed again
after which it is pressed into balls and dried for use as
tinder. The kernels that remain behind are also loaded into
baskets to be dried in the sun before cracking to provide
the ‘palm kernels’ that are exported. The crude oil obtained from the pericarp is clarified
by boiling during which time it is kept in constant motion
by passing a small basket back and forth to catch all the
remaining fragments of fibre.
After about half an hour the oil turns blood-red and
can be skimmed off. The
skimming is repeated a number of times before the oil is poured
into five-gallon jars for marketing. From beginning to end this clarifying process takes
8 – 14 hours. People
begin working at about 4 o’clock in the afternoon and continue
all through the night and into the cool hours of morning. Alvan Millson, Assistant Colonial Secretary in Lagos
in 1892 who reported this process for the Kew Bulletin, calculated
that to produce the 3 million gallons of palm oil annually
exported from Lagos, 150 000 tonnes of palm nuts were gathered
each year from 15 million trees. As this process lends itself to mechanisation, each
plantation has benefitted by having its own processing plant
and it is no wonder that W G Hodge could report in Principes
of October 1975 that the world exports of coconut oil in the
decade 1962-1972 increased only by 16% while that of Elaeis
oils leapt ahead at a 75% increase. The other species, Elaeis oleifera (the oil-bearing
Elaeis) of South
and Central America has not had the same horticultural attention
and is still exploited only from wild stands.
However, it has oleaginous characteristics very similar
to the African oil palm and would no doubt be as great a provider
of revenue to those countries. Ex
Africa Semper Aliquid
Novi
The dwarf Pondoland palm, Jubaeopsis caffra, is the only member of the coconut tribe that grows naturally
in South Africa. It
is found in a very confined area from the mouths to about
5 km inland of the Mtentu and the Msikaba rivers which are
only 10 kms apart. It was given a name as recently as 1913 although specimens have
been found in Kew and in the National Herbarium (under other
names) dated 1898 and 1899 respectively.
Its nearest relative is a Chilean palm, Jubaea chilensis and this little palm
is clothed in mystery. It
has been accepted that it is a true endemic to Pondoland but
there is a legend about unknown explorers from the East having
brought it here many centuries ago. The trees are single stemmed to start with but soon
become multi-stemmed like out Phoenix reclinata and are seldom over
5m in height. The
leaves, like those of the preceding two species, are pinnate
with A-folded leaflets which distinguishes it clearly from
the V-folded Phoenix reclinata leaflets.(roofs and
gutters a la Kim Damstra)
They can be up to 4 m long and arch gracefully over
the flowing rivers. The flowers are male and female and are arranged
in triads with two lateral male flowers for each female flower. The fruits are only about 3 cms in diameter
but resemble the large coconut in almost every detail with
a fibrous ‘coir’ covering and a thin white layer of endosperm
surrounding the central cavity which contains a sip of coconut milk.
It is relished by children but has no other real uses
which is just as well as so small a population would have
been wiped out long ago if treated in the way Raphia and Hyphaene,
the wine palms, are treated.
The Transkei Nature Conservation Act has conferred
protection on it and part of the colony occurs in the Mkambati
Nature Reserve. The name Jubaeopsis relates it to Jubaea which
honours our old friend King Juba of Mauritania who named Euphorbia. Jubaea chilensis is a tremendously
robust palm known to have the thickest of all palm trunks. Two specimens can be seen in the town of Uitenhage
where they make spectacular feature trees. In Chile the fruits which are very similar to those of Jubaeopsis are called coquitos or little coconuts. Jubaeopsis
is known commonly as Pondo Coconut, Dwarf Coconut or inKomba. Worldwide there are many more Cocosoid genera of palms
many of them providing useful products such as Attalea junifera, Bahia piassave,
which is grown for the round, stiff bristle fibre used in
brooms which is obtained from the leaf-bases.
Its nuts are called coquilla
nuts and they are widely used in turnery for the handles of
bell-pulls and umbrellas and also for buttons. But Cocos and Elaeis are hard to beat in their service
to mankind and this is one of the strongest factors which
gives the Arecaceae (Palmae), as a family, their proud place
second only to the grain plants (Poaceae or Gramineae) in
economic importance in the world COMMITTEE MEMBERS’ CONTACT
TEL. NUMBERS
Harare
Mark
Hyde
Cell 091233751 Terry
Fallon Adele
Hamilton Ritchie Eva
Keller Office 610029/33 Maureen
Silva-Jones Cell 011719601 Bulawayo
Jonathan Timberlake The Tree Society’s e-mail address is
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