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TREE
SOCIETY OF ZIMBABWE
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May 2004 JOURNAL
OF THE TREE LIFE
Dear Tree Society members
It is so sad to have to tell you that Maurice Graves died on Sunday 6th June. There will be a Requiem Mass in his memory at Nazareth House on Friday 11th June at 10.30 am. Kind regards Maureen S-J. Annual subs are now due. Prompt
payment would be appreciated. $5000 for Tree Life by email
or $10000 by post MASHONALAND
CALENDAR
Saturday
1st May. Botanic Garden Walk. Meet Tom in the car park at 10.45am for 11.
Today’s topic will be several small families which have
not been covered before on these walks, such as loganiaceae
(strychnos) and cornaceae (curtisia)
Sunday 9th
May. AGM at
Thetford Estate. Directions To get
here, the easiest route to take would be along the Golden Stairs
Road, as if you were proceeding to Mazowe. At the 22,5 km peg Tea will be served at 9.30am
and the meeting will begin at 10.00am. Please bring a plate of eats
to share for tea and bring your chair. After the meeting our host Mr.
Mark Brightman will lead us to a suitable spot for our walk. 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. Saturday 22nd
May. Mark’s Walk will be at Mr and Mrs Copcutt’s
small holding in the suburb of Kambanji. We will meet at 2.30pm
as usual. Directions. Proceed out of Harare on the Enterprise Road and turn left onto
Drew Road at the new round about at Chisipite. Continue for
a bit more than 2 kms along Drew (almost to the end of the road)
then turn left into Lychgate. Continue along Lychgate and turn
left into Lot 5 sign-posted Copcutt selecting the hill road
of the double drive. Saturday 5th June. Tom will be away for the next three months
but Meg Coates Palgrave has kindly offered to lead the walks
in his absence. Sunday 20th June. Possibly to a small holding in Darwendale area Saturday 26th
June. Mark’s Walk MATABELELAND
CALENDAR
Nothing has
been arranged for
May. CHAIRMAN’S REPORT TO THE AGM ON
MAY 9th 2004 I have pleasure in presenting the Chairman’s report
for the year since the last AGM in May 2003. General When I sat down to write this report, I re-read the
opening paragraph of the 2003 report and thought – “why not
just change 2003 to 2004 and reprint it?” - since so many of
the problems we are facing are the same. During the year under review, inflation soared to over
600% per annum, negative real interest rates continued to batter
our savings, fuel shortages characterised most of the period
and once again, commercial farms were generally unavailable
for visits. To this happy catalogue, one could also add the dire
shortage of cash, which nearly caused us problems on our trip
to the Vumba. However, once again, the Society has managed to keep
going and even thrive. Sadly, I suspect that the 2005 report
will be much the same again as the problems are deeply entrenched. Outings During the year, a full complement of main 3rd
Sunday outings was held; these were at Rob and Gillian Smith’s
home in Harare (the AGM), Arcturus (twice: Darryl Tiran and
Kevin Fallon), Gwaai Farm near Wedza, Mitchell and Mitchell
at Marondera, Lake Chivero, Umwindsidale (Eleanor and Norman
Dickens), Domboshawa (twice!), Crest Farm and (to come) Mazvikadei.
We are most grateful to the various landowners (or their representatives)
for giving us permission to visit and to the leaders of our
walks for their time and knowledge. A fascinating longer trip was spent in the Vumba over
the Heroes’ weekend in August. I am most grateful to John Bennett,
Bart and Petra Wursten, Tackie Bannerman, Werner Fibeck and
Meg Coates-Palgrave for their assistance on that trip. Once again, Tom Muller each month gave us his time
to lead us in the Harare Botanic gardens. Subjects covered included
Acacia, Albizia, Annonaceae, Boraginacae, Flacourtiaceae, Lamiaceae,
Sapotaceae and Verbenaceae. We are very fortunate indeed to
have someone of his calibre. I am also very grateful to Meg
Coates-Palgrave who stood in for Tom while he was on holiday
and extended our horizons to South African trees. A nearly complete set of 4th Saturday walks
was led by me at which we explored not only the trees but also
the weeds and exotic trees. Other
functions
Three informal evening functions were held during the
year. Lyn Mullin spoke on Eucalypts, Adele Hamilton-Ritchie
on the Indian city of Hampi and Fr Brendan Conway on his trip
to Kilimanjaro and Ruwenzori in 1962. Our great thanks go to
our speakers and our hosts. In February 2004, Bob Drummond achieved his 80th
birthday and a small informal gathering of members was held
at Eva Keller’s home. Matabeleland
branch Once again, this has been quiet during the year. Membership The current membership, compared to previous years,
is as follows:
It may be seen that although the membership has once
again fallen, the dramatic declines of the last 3 years have
been arrested. A particular source of new members has been the Twinarts
emails and I’d like to thank Linda Hyde for systematically keeping
those up to date. We report with sadness the death of 4 members during
the year. The death of Lyn Mullin, our Deputy Chairman, was
a great blow and we will miss his wise counsel. Mrs Aylen, the
wife of the late Doug Aylen, who was a key member of the Society
and a former Chairman, passed away during the year as also did
Nino Bianchi and John Smart. Some members also emigrated during the year: the DuPlessis’s
to Zambia, Mrs Dudhia to Bangladesh and Mrs Hurley to South
Africa. In all cases, however, they have remained members. Tree Mapping The Tree Mapping exercise is currently “on hold”. Tree Life Perhaps the major effort of the Society is the production
of our monthly Newsletter. Most of the hard work falls on Maureen
and I am very grateful to her for her hard work. Vida Siebert
continued her “behind the scenes” work of collation and I would
like to thank her as well. Lyn Mullin was also a major contributor
to Tree Life and we shall miss him very much in that regard.
John Lawrence has been of great assistance in writing up our
outings. Tree Life is also our major cost and we were faced
with either cutting back and sending it out less frequently
than monthly or raising subs to unacceptable levels. The solution
has been, where possible, to send out Tree Life by email, which
although not ideal in some ways, has effectively saved the Society. Finance The year under review was another difficult one financially.
However, we have continued in existence by cutting costs and
through many generous donations. During the year, Terry Fallon took over as Treasurer
and we are very pleased to welcome him to the post. Publications Lyn Mullin’s book “Historic Trees of Zimbabwe” appeared
in 2003 and has been a great success. Also, Lyn’s list of vernacular
names of Zimbabwean plants was completed in draft by the time
of his death and the Society intends to publish it during the
year. The Mweb web site has been maintained on a regular
basis by Odette Lind and we are very grateful to both Odette
and Mweb for their support. Purpose
of the Society
The Committee
also considered what the function of the Society should be.
Are there things that we should be doing which we are not? Should
we not perhaps be more focussed on specific projects? Or are
we happy to continue as we are? Perhaps this issue could be
discussed at the AGM. Finally, I would like to thank the Committee for their hard
work and support during the past year. Mark Hyde Chairman BOTANIC GARDEN WALK: 2 MARCH 2004
No specific subject had been chosen for this walk and
it was agreed that we would simply look at any trees of interest.
It was very nice to meet again two unexpected visitors namely
the Duplessis’s, who were back in Zimbabwe on a short visit
from Zambia where they are now farming. The following is just a selection of the many species
we saw. Tom mentioned that the species in the genus Entandrophragma
often have nice wood and this is true of our sole Zimbabwean
species, Entandrophragma caudatum (the Wooden banana). Mabberley tells
us that there are 11 species in the world, all of which are
tropical African, and many have wood which is used as a substitute
for true mahoganies. Specifically,
E. candollei,
E. angolense, E. cylindricum and E. utile. In our species, the leaves are 1-pinnate and glossy
and the leaflets have drip-tips. A striking and famous Acacia is A. erioloba (formerly A.
giraffae). This Kalahari sand species occurs in Namibia where
it is the last tree you encounter before you reach the desert.
The pods are a distinctive broadly curved shape; they have a
very high protein content and are very important as fodder.
In many cases, the trees themselves eventually become flat-topped. An interesting species of Grewia was G. retinervis. This is a species occurring in “gusu”, i.e.
Kalahari sand. Interestingly it has square stems like the very
common G. flavescens. The flowers
were yellow and relatively small and the leaves green beneath,
slightly rough above and with an asymmetric base. Later we saw Grewia
flavescens. This species is rather larger in its parts than
the more delicate retinervis, the angular nature of the stems is more pronounced.
Several times on the walk we passed Ziziphus abyssinica. This is a lowveld
species, somewhat similar to the common one around Harare, Z. mucronata, but with deeply impressed veins and
larger leaves. Oddly we saw it in January in the Mukuvisi Woodlands
by Blatherwick Avenue, where, presumably it was planted. There
it grows with a marula (not really native to the Harare area),
Dalbergia sissoo (a definite
alien) and a clump of Phyllanthus reticulatus (again not
really occurring where it should). The presence of all these
species together further suggests that someone in the past has
been busy planting unusual trees. Erythroxylum
zambesiacum
was in fruit with numerous small red berries. Tom mentioned
that this is a species of the jesse but also occurs in alluvium
as well. As we have noted before the impression of the plant
(if there are no flowers or fruits) is rather similar to Flueggea virosa, but the Erythroxylum has pendent branches and
a distinctive peeling bark. Dalbergia martinii
is that extraordinary species which grows in the Zambezi valley
which has sticky patches on the outside of it pods. It is also
a sprawling, semi-climbing plant. The specimen in the Gardens
was covered in pods and we were able to experience the stickiness
first hand. Finally, a common species, Vangueriopsis lanciflora. This was a smallish specimen but it showed
very strongly and clearly the reddish-brown powdery bark that
this species tends to have. This is a useful character to separate
it from Vangueria
infausta. Once again, may I thank Tom for giving up his time
to lead us through the Gardens. Mark Hyde kkk THE GREAT LEADWOOD AT SOMAVUNDHLA PAN
Out of this tree...long,long ago, at the very beginning of all things,
came forth a man and a woman.
The man was Mukuru, the first ancestor, and the woman
was Kamungundu. From them came the Herero, the Ovambo, the
Ovatyaona...and the Nama. The
oxen, too, came out of the sacred Omumborumbonga tree, but the
sheep and goats came from underneath a flat stone. PENNY MILLER (1979) - MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF SOUTHERN AFRICA The legend of the ancestral tree of man and of
the animals comes from Namibia, where the Herero people show
great reverence towards the leadwood tree, Combretum
imberbe, known in Afrikaans as hardekool. This legend is no part of the traditions of
Zimbabwe, where the tree is common and well known for its extremely
hard and heavy wood which burns to a markedly white ash, hence
the Shona name, muchenarota. The Ndebele people call it umchenalota. Well off the tourist route in Hwange National
Park, at Somavundhla Pan, there stands a great leadwood that
could, indeed, be the ancestor of all living things, if appearance
is anything to go by. Leadwood is believed to be extremely slow growing,
and a really large specimen could be more than a thousand years
old. The tree at Somavundhla
Pan had a diameter at ground level of 2.55 metres in June 1987,
a height of 19 metres, and a crown spread of 23 metres.
A little above ground level the main stem divided into
three, and the largest of these was 1.11 metres in diameter.
There are plenty of much taller specimens of its kind
in Zimbabwe, but none is known with a greater diameter at the
ground. This tree has kept watch at the pan for untold
centuries, and its bark has been worn smooth by the rubbing
of countless wild animals that have drunk there. Lyn Mullin
CREST POULTRY FARM 21 MARCH 2004 The
Tree Society Sunday outing in March was at Crest Poultry Farm,
on the southern outskirts of Harare. There were 17 members and
visitors, led by Rob Burrett. We parked our cars outside the
main entrance boom and spent a rewarding day exploring a large
block of indigenous woodland extending between the road and
a wide vlei. The
area was granite sand veld, with occasional low outcrops of
rock and a few large anthills. The dominant trees were Julbernardia globiflora and Brachystegia
spiciformis, probably not more than 30 years old. They
sheltered a surprisingly varied population of trees and shrubs
that gave us plenty to study during the day. The woodland was
heavily invaded by Lantana camara, which is
always undesirable, but on this occasion it provided great splashes
of colour that were very attractive. Although it was a hot and
sunny day, the recent rains had left a legacy of a wide variety
of fungi under the trees. None of the party had any claim to
specialist knowledge of this family, and the general consensus
was that they were probably all poisonous, with the exception
of little red chanterelles, which Adele collected. There were
also quite a number of small ferns. The
most unusual tree that we encountered was Commiphora africana, growing on a rocky
outcrop. It was a small tree with velvety, trifoliolate leaves
and spine-tipped branchlets. We did not notice the resin, which
is supposed to be a diagnostic feature of the genus Commiphora.
The smaller branches were irregularly thickened, which Rob explained
was the result of parasitism by the larvae of Diamphidia beetles.
These larvae feed exclusively on this species, and the pupae
were used to make arrow poison by the San people; hence one
of the common names, the Poison-grub Corkwood (why Corkwood?). A
much better candidate for the name Corkwood is Strychnos cocculoides, the
Corky-bark Monkey-orange, of which we saw many examples. It
closely resembles its more common relative, Strychnos spinosa, which we didn't
see, having three to five-veined leaves, spines, and large,
round, hard-skinned fruit. The obvious distinguishing feature
is the thick, ridged, corky bark. The fruit is speckled with
white, not plain, and apparently is more tasty. Given
Rob's special interest in trees with edible fruits, we were
fortunate to find a number of different species in this category.
Vangueria infausta, the
Wild-medlar, and Vangueriopsis lanciflora, the False-medlar, were very common,
although unfortunately not in fruit. Their close proximity gave
us ample opportunity to practise our skill at differentiating
them from each other; the leaves of Vangueriopsis have the midrib
raised on the upper surface and therefore fold less easily along
their length, but it's rather subjective. They are more easily
differentiated by their flowers and fruit, but in any case,
does it matter if you can't tell the difference? Around Harare
they look alike, they grow in the same environment, and they
both have edible fruit, so enjoy the fruit if you can find it!
Other trees with edible fruit that we encountered were Ximenia
caffra, Rhus tenuinervis, Diospyros lycioides and Ziziphus mucronata. One
tree that caught my eye, that I hope I can remember next time,
was Ochna
pulchra. The leaves were simple and not particularly
characteristic, but the bark was. It was grey, rough and scaly
at the base, but smooth, pale grey and peeling further up, revealing
a delicate pink underbark, hence the common name Peeling-bark
Ochna. The contrasting bark has given rise to the nickname Mermaid
Tree, with a scaly tail and smooth pink shoulders. While
most of the woodland was fairly uniform, we encountered different
tree associations in two distinct habitats. One was an antheap.
The tree species that grow on antheaps tend to be those of a
lower altitude than the surrounding bush. The species that we
identified on the antheap and nowhere else were Flueggia
virosa, Schotia brachypetala and Vangueria randii, the Antheap Wild-medlar,
also edible. The other habitat was an area that had been cleared
at one stage, possibly for use as a landing strip. Here we found
Terminalia
sericea and three pioneer Acacia species, A.ataxacantha, A.sieberiana
and A.nilotica.
Finally, on the edge of the vlei, we encountered two suffrutex
species growing; Parinari
capensis, which we see quite often, and a species of
Vangueria that we could not identify. We
enjoyed a relaxed and sociable day in the open air, and hopefully
came home knowing a little more about the trees of the Harare
area than we had when we set out. John A Lawrence 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 By Estell Brink
Chief among the Cocosoid palms is that feature of all
tropical beaches, the ubiquitous coconut which girdles the earth
from Cancer to Capricorn. It
was a mainstay in the survival of man, the tropical ape, and
is still one of the most important sources of plant oil which
is used commercially in the manufacture of soaps and margarines. The generic name, Cocos, derives either from the Greek
kouki for coconut or the Portuguese macoco, a kind of monkey,
which relates to the ‘monkey-face’ formed by the three scars
on the end of every coconut.
The latter is certainly more entertaining calling up,
as it does, visions of generations of ‘Doco the Clown’ trailing
rosy clouds of childhood for all of us. These fruits, wrapped in swathes of coir, are designed for floating
and they have used the highways of the ocean currents that circle
the world to colonise the tropics and, in the process, have
themselves adapted and changed so that botanists have been hard
put to decide whether it is still one species or 60 as indicated
by some authorities. The mother species, Cocos nucifera (the nut-bearing cocos) is the
most commonly encountered and is actively cultivated for its
manifold uses. The trees are tall 9 up to 35 m) and slender and seldom
grow upright but lean at an angle towards the sun. Often this coincides with the shore-line and
the coconuts that drop in the ocean are swept away to colonise
new shores. No doubt this is an important dispersal mechanism
but its propagation from island to island has nearly always
been the deliberate work of men and its introduction to Sri
Lanka is recent enough for it to be a matter of reliable legend.
It is believed that it originated in tropical America
and that men were probably responsible for its westward crossing
of the Pacific. By the time the Europeans set out on their voyages of discovery,
it was already a well-established crop of cultivation in Polynesia
and Malaya. Each tree is crowned by 16 – 20 pinnate leaves with
reduplicate or A-folded) leaflets and each leaf can be up to
6 m long. The flowers are male and female and are borne
by the same inflorescence in triads in depressions on the branches. Each inflorescence can be 2 m long. Five to fifteen nuts are borne in each and
fully grown trees produce 4 to 5 crops annually for up to eighty
years. It is commercially exploited for toddy in the Phillipines,
Java and Sri Lanka and coir, as an article of commerce, comes
chiefly from Sri Lanka. But
these are secondary to the principle product, copra, which bears
the valuable coconut oil of commerce.
For many years it was the world’s single most important
source of vegetable oil and it was to exploit this that the
vast plantations were planted in the lowland tropical areas
of the Phillipines, Oceania, Indonesia, Malaysia and Sri Lanka
which together produce over 90% of the world’s coconut oil.
In 1972 Purseglove reported that there were over 5 million
trees on 10 million acres in these countries. Copra is the dried flesh (or endosperm) of the Cocos
seed and 65% of it is oil but the harvesting and preparation
of copra is not amenable to mechanisation and this all important
first step in the industry relies totally on hand labour.
As the nuts need to be fully ripe before use one could
theoretically wait for them to drop but the preferred method
in the Phillipines is to cut them down by using a curved knife
mounted on a long bamboo pole or by actually climbing the trees
either by means of notches cut into the trunk or the ingenious
use of a rope harness. In
the Sunda Islands monkeys have been trained to do this job and
Sarawak has occasionally exported these trained monkeys to other
islands in a kind of latter day ‘primate slave trade’.
However, these difficulties are only part of the reason
why Cocos nucifera is facing strong competition in the oil-race
by another Cocosoid palm, the oil-palm or Elaeis guineensis. To
be continued. The
planting of the Khaya
anthotheca in Lyn’s memory went well at Forest Research
Centre on Sunday afternoon 25th April.
More than 30 people turned up and I would like to thank
you all for coming and giving your support.
Thank
you from Anne Mullin.
COMMITTEE MEMBERS’
CONTACT TEL. NUMBERS
Harare
Mark Hyde
Home 745263 “
Cell 091 233751 Terry Fallon Home 778789 Adele Hamilton Ritchie Home 744651 Eva Keller
Home 339368 “
Office 610029/33 Maureen Silva-Jones Home 740479 “
Cell 011 719601 Bulawayo
Jonathan Timberlake Home 286529 The Tree Society’s e-mail
address is The Tree Society web site is http://treesociety.mweb.co.zw/ k k&:k kCOMMITTEE 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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