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TREE
SOCIETY OF ZIMBABWE
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September 2004 JOURNAL
OF THE TREE LIFE MASHONALAND CALENDARSaturday 4th September. Botanic Garden
Walk. We hope that in Tom’s absence Meg will step in to lead the walk. Meet in the car park at 10.45 for 11am. Sunday 19th September It’s
a long time since we went to the Chinamora/Masembura areas
east of Harare. One of the interesting spots is Chikupu
Caves. There is
a stream which trickles along most of the year so the vegetation
there should be a little greener than in the surrounding
countryside. The
four caves are said by Peter Garlake in his book Painted
Caves “to contain
probably the greatest number of paintings on any site in
Zimbabwe, most of them in excellent condition”. Directions to CHIKUPU - from 'The Painted Caves' by Peter Garlake Take
the Borrowdale Road, pass Domboshawa shops, pass the turnoff
to Domboshawa cave, keep going on the tar road through a
business centre, eventually you come to a fairly sharp U
bend to the right, on the left just before the top of the
bend there's a dirt road with a signpost to Chinamora School,
turn left there (47.3 kms).
Keep going till you come to a Tee junction (66.4
kms), turn right to Masembura School. Pass Masembura school, continue on, do not
take right fork. Pass foot of large granite dome on right
(71.5 kms). Chikupu is then visible in the large low hill
that comes into view on right. (72.0 kms) Turn right onto
track. 72.6 kms turn right at homestead, just before
small stream and bridge onto poor track, seasonally waterlogged.
Continue past several homesteads.
73.5 park car at foot of hill containing
caves. It may
be better to park under some large trees where the final
bit of track becomes rather rough. Bring a chair, water and your
lunch. We will meet at 9.30 am. Saturday 25th September. Mark's walk will be on Mrs Doris Kileff’s 30 acres
– ‘Bunkers Hill’ close to the airport..
To get there take the airport road out of Harare
and turn right into Harare Drive, this is the last
turnoff before the Independence Arch.
A couple of hundred of metres along Harare Drive
turn left at the sign post P. Kileff,
‘Bunkers Hill’. We will
meet at 2.30
pm. at the homestead. Tuesday 5th October. Botanic Garden Walk. Note that summer has returned
so the walks revert to Tuesday evenings. Sunday 17th October Perhaps to Mutoroshanga area. Saturday
23rd October. Mark’s Walk
– Glen Lorne. k MATABELELAND
CALENDAR
Sunday 19th September. Meet at 7.30 at the home of Val Deas – 135 Crouch Road. Leeside. Turn right into Crouch Road in front of Leeside Supermarket, and Val’s
house is 2nd on the right. Phone J P Felu on Bulawayo 62797 if you require further information. kkk INDIGENOUS
TREE FLOWERING
Meg Coates
Palgrave's article in Tree Life 292 on indigenous tree flowering
interested me with regard to her comments on the pollination
of some trees mentioned. As a beekeeper, I have made observations
on a few of the trees described. Albizia
versicolor - Before I was chased away from my apiary site
near Banket, there was a magnificent specimen close by and
during my first season there it flowered profusely and was
a sight to behold. My bees were also impressed, and a very heavy
fruit set ensued. Interestingly, however, the following
season produced very few flowers indeed and I thought that
possibly this particular tree had used up considerable energy
reserves the previous year which had restricted the flowing
in the next. Kigelia
africana - Meg says
this tree is probably bat pollinated.
As stated by her, it produces copious nectar. Honey
bees find the flowers very attractive, and one can assume
they pollinate the flowers in the process of collecting
its nectar. Terminalia
spp. - Several species of this tree (if not all) are
attractive to honey bees but it is generally accepted that
the honey therefrom is unmarketable due to its unpleasant
flavour. Having said that, one season I left behind a few
bee hives at Charara Estate, Kariba, after completing a
pollination contract. This
coincided with heavy flowering of Terminalia stuhlmannii. The resultant honey had a very distinctive
flavour, very much reminiscent of the scent of the flowers,
and not unpleasant to the taste at all. Peter Taylor k PLEASANT VALLEY: SUNDAY, JULY 18TH, 2004 By kind permission
of Kevin Fallon, our outing was to Pleasant Valley Farm,
near Arcturus. Maybe it was because of the desire to get
out of town and enjoy the bush or maybe it was the promise
of “potjiekos”
for lunch, but for whatever the reason our attendance was
particularly good at just over 30. This was also the
second outing in which we had split the members into two
groups, one learners’ group following Rob Burrett and a
more advanced group led by me. This write-up obviously is
only concerned with the trees my group saw, but by all accounts,
this splitting has turned out to be an excellent idea –
it is not easy to cope with all levels of knowledge at once.
It also provides good variety from me leading all the outings. We set off down
the slope from the farmhouse into woodland near the river.
The GPS told us that we were a bit lower than usual at 1300
m (about 4300 ft for the non-metricated). One of the trees
which is local in the Harare area is Rauvolfia
caffra, the Quinine tree. Around here it is a riverine
species, although I must say that it does very well out
of habitat in our garden in Alexandra Park. In the Eastern
Highlands with their higher rainfall, the species is less
choosy and may occur more widely but in practice it is often
a species of forest edges. The leaves occur
in whorls and, as with many Apocynaceae, milky latex is
produced from the stem. The inflorescence consists of greenish
flowers in a flat-topped, usually terminal, arrangement.
Fruits are more or less spherical. Another slightly
local riverine species was Ekebergia
capensis, (the Dogplum) of which there were numerous
specimens. This is from the Mahogany family, Meliaceae;
it has medium-sized, dark green, pinnate leaves with a terminal
leaflet (i.e. they are imparipinnate). Flowers in this genus
are rather small and inconspicuous. Also riverine was
Mimusops zeyheri
(Common red milkwood). This can be a puzzling species to
name when there are no flowers or fruits, with its spiral
glossy leaves and milky latex; for example it can look like
some strange species of fig. It is a riverine species but
also occurs in rocky habitats as well. Euclea
racemosa subsp. schimperi
(Bush guarri) also occupies the same combination of riverine/rocky
habitats as well and we saw plenty of this. So too does
Englerophytum magalismontanum
(the Stem fruit), also found in the shade of the riverine
forest. In the riverine
fringe, were the usual exotics and weedy native species.
One quite attractive large shrub is Vernonia
myriantha (Poison tree vernonia) which has large flat-topped
inflorescences of whitish-purple flowers which can be quite
striking. Guava plants (Psidium guajava) were also seen as well
as escaped “Cedrela”, namely Toona
ciliata. In the understorey were plants of Senna septemtrionalis, a yellow flowered senna, introduced from America. A very attractive
garden plant which escapes around Harare is Passiflora subpeltata.
It is a climber and has white flowers and small green fruits.
There was a lot of it here in the shadier riverine. A very striking
specimen of Phytolacca
dodecandra was also found, This has long flower spikes
of whitish flowers. The plant is a scrambler rather than
a tree but it may attain considerable heights and look quite
tree-like when supported by other woody plants. Erythrococca trichogyne (the Twin red-berry) often
doesn’t look very distinctive, but when in fruit it show
the red arils of its seeds. It is a Euphorbiaceae, which
occurs occasionally in the Harare area. Lunch was a sumptuous
affair and we are very grateful to Kevin and Iona for their
generosity to the Society. After such a good lunch, energy
was rather lacking but a number of people joined me in walking
up the slope behind the house into some miombo woodland.
There we saw a different selection of species – many typical
of that habitat. All in all it was
a most enjoyable day. I’d like to thank Rob Burrett for
leading the learners’ group and Kevin and Iona
Fallon for their hospitality. Mark
Hyde
kkk BOTANIC GARDEN WALK: 3 JULY 2004 We were very fortunate, in
the absence of Tom Muller, to have Meg Coates Palgrave to
lead us in the Gardens and talk about miombo woodland. Miombo woodland is an East
African colloquial term. It is defined as woodland which
is dominated by species from one of the three genera: Brachystegia,
Isoberlinia or
Julbernardia. It occurs in Africa south of
the Equator to just south of Zimbabwe and consists of deciduous
woodland, the canopy of which is completely closed or almost
so. In Zimbabwe we have no Isoberlinia;
but we do have several Brachystegia spp., the best known
of which is probably the msasa, and one Julbernardia. Most
(maybe all?) have the typical reddish-brown flush when their
new leaves appear in Spring and Meg explained that this
was effectively a sun screen, namely a means of protecting
the young leaf from sun damage. After 24 days, the leaves
turn green. Zimbabwe lies at the southern
end of miombo woodland and is relatively poor in species.
Zambia is the centre of diversity for Brachystegia, where
it is wetter and more scope for species to evolve. It is
no accident that our richest areas tend to be in the N and
E of the country, that is up towards the Zambian border. The soils in miombo woodland
tend to be poor; local areas of species richness do however
occur on granite kopjes, termite mounds and riverine fringes.
Most of the trees have a thick bark to protect from fire. Brachystegia
glaucescens (Mountain acacia) This was the first species
we examined; it is invariably a species of rocky places.
The bark is relatively thin (it doesn’t need to worry about
fire) and the pods usually have a purplish tinge. As with
all the miombo species, the leaves are paripinnate. Brachystegia
spiciformis (Msasa) A specimen of this species
which was fruiting at eye-level was examined. Meg showed
the vestigial stipels at the base of each leaflet; these
do not occur in Julbernardia and provide a character to
separate the two.The terminal pair of leaflets are the largest
and the weight of these means the leaves tend to wave in
the breeze. The flowers occur as soon as the leaves grow
green, typically in September, and are pleasantly fragrant.
The pods are glabrous and occur within and on top of the
canopy. Julbernardia
globiflora (Mnondo) This has no stipels. The leaves
are definitely hairy, especially on the margins and rhachis.
The largest leaflets are in the middle, not the end and
therefore the leaves are not in constant motion. The pods are furry and are
borne above the canopy. It flowers much later in the year
(January). Brachystegia
boehmii (Mufuti) This is the fourth common component
of miombo woodland in Zimbabwe. The leaves have many pairs
of leaflets and are larger than the other three species.
This occupies slightly lower altitude, drier woodland than
B. spiciformis but is very common throughout
much of Zimbabwe. A question was raised about
the existence of hybrids and particularly Brachystegia
spiciformis × glaucescens.
It seems that further work is needed to establish whether
this really occurs and what form(s) it takes. Having looked at the
principal components which define miombo woodland, we looked
at some of the trees which commonly occur there. These included:
Albizia antunesiana, Bolusanthus
speciosus, Bridelia cathartica, Carissa edulis, Combretum
molle, Flacourtia indica, Monotes glaber, Peltophorum africanum,
Pittosporum viridiflorum, Pterocarpus rotundifolius, Terminalia
sericea and Vangueriopsis lanciflora. But the piece de resistance
was definitely a fruiting specimen of Pappea
capensis (the
Indaba tree). Although a common tree, Meg mentioned that
she had rarely seen in fruit and I would support that. It
has short pendulous inflorescences bearing more or less
spherical fruit from which bulge a fleshy red aril. The
effect is very striking indeed and made a very satisfactory
end to a long and interesting walk. Thanks, Meg, for your
time and expertise. Both are very much appreciated. Mark
Hyde
k THE PETHERAM FILES Compiled by Lyn Mullin Richard Walter Petheram,
known to most of his associates as Dick (and, for reasons
unknown, to some of his close friends as Peter), had a long
and distinguished career in the Southern Rhodesian Civil
Service, finally retiring in the late 1960s as Deputy Secretary
for Mines and Lands. In
his administrative capacity he had close association with
the Forestry Commission, and perhaps it was this that helped
develop his abiding interest in, and love of, trees.
He was a prominent member of the Tree Society for
many years, serving in various capacities on the Committee.
He was one of the leading advocates for the preservation
of the Mukuvisi Woodlands, and the development of this beautiful
area into what it has become today. As one would expect from a
senior Civil Servant in the earlier administration of this
country, Dick Petheram had an extremely orderly approach
to whatever he was doing, a trait that extended to the private
files he maintained on trees and other subjects that interested
him. After his death
his files on trees and other related matters were given
to the Tree Society for use in whatever way seemed appropriate,
and, as a rather belated tribute to Dick, extracts from
these files will appear in TREE LIFE from time to time. These extracts will appear in Dick’s own words,
edited only where absolutely necessary, particularly to
update botanical and place names.
Comments have been added where they have seemed appropriate,
and appear in square brackets in a smaller font as [Comment
2002:…]. TREES AND A LITTLE HISTORY
[Comment 2002 This file was undated, and appears to have
been the text of an address, perhaps to a school, some time
in 1976 or earlier. The
text of this address was published in The
Rhodesia Science News in 1976 (? Volume 10) but there
is no record in the files of which Number. All place names in the original text have been
changed to reflect the post-Independence era, except in
one or two cases where the old names are more appropriate.
A section on palaeobotany that was included under
this heading has been transferred to File 3, which deals
at greater length with this subject.] Introduction
At a time when the unwritten
code of our society was “Spare the rod and spoil the child”,
we had at school a teacher to whom the preservation of trees
had nothing whatever to do with beauty or conservation.
To him they grew for one purpose only, and to those
who were inattentive in class he handed over his pocket
knife, and wordlessly pointed to the trees outside the window.
When the required switch had been cut, he tested
it for tone and texture, then proceeded to administer justice. Prevailing attitudes towards
corporal punishment at school seem to change from time to
time—and I wouldn’t want to become involved in a debate
on the subject—but there was a time at boys’ schools when
trees became deeply impressed upon one’s system during childhood,
and looking back, at least a tiny part of the history of
the school system, as we knew it, was tied up most feelingly
with trees. There is no implied threat in this little tale—I
simply wish to make the point that although we had no lessons
in botany as such, something about trees was absorbed into
our systems. To everyone, a tree with particular
associations embraces within its branches a little bit of
history—present or past, sad or glad, family history, community
history, or national history.
There are many such trees in Zimbabwe, with associations
of the most diverse nature; trees connected by the lengthening
thread of years to the trials, tribulations, and triumphs
of early white settlers, trees subsequently planted to commemorate
those eventful times, trees that witnessed the struggles
and accomplishments of earlier adventurers, trees feared
or revered by a relatively primitive people because of size,
or shape, or rarity. Some trees in the latter category
might well place under considerable strain the strict definitions
of the two terms “historic” and “historical”, but they are,
I believe, part of the fabric of our history. [Comment 2002: the author had a note in the margin that reads
“Concise Oxford Dictionary—historical = belonging to history,
not legend; historic
= noted in history.] There is, in addition, a wide
range of exotic trees of historical significance—the mission
plantings in Matabeleland prior to the Occupation; the large
plantations of people like Swynnerton near Chipinge, and
William Harvey Brown outside Harare in the 1890s; the arboretum
development at Matopos in the early 1900s; and many other
plantings over the years.
These latter include, for example, the golden Lawson’s
cypress of Major Randolph Nesbitt, VC, at Goromonzi, now
some 70 years old, and the Schizolobium parahybum planted as recently as 1951 in what is now
Africa Unity Square, Harare, by the last two surviving members
of the Pioneer Column, J Crawford and JA Palmer.
That Schizolobium, by the way, was planted
with the same silver spade that was used by the late King
George VI to plant trees at Government House a few years
previously. In passing, I think it might
be of interest to know that quite a large quantity of seed
of sundry exotics was distributed from the Matopos nursery
in 1903/4 to Nyanga, and in 1904, also, to Mutare, Chimanimani,
and Victoria Falls. The seed was sent up in some cases from the Cape, but in many cases
it was imported from India, Nepal, and Australia. There might also have been quite an interchange
of plants between Matopos and the Bulawayo Park at about
that time. Certainly Matopos received a large number of
seedlings from the Park, in addition to those raised in
its own nursery. The drawback to so wide a field
of investigation is that one inevitably gets snarled up
in everything—from mysterious old lemon groves in the heart
of the bush to the vexed question of whether Mr André Holland’s
grandfather planted the first jacaranda in Harare. [Comment 2002: The question of who planted the first jacaranda
in Harare was pretty well settled by Major HG Mundy in an
article that appeared in The
Rhodesia Herald on 17 December 1958.
He attributed the first jacaranda to a Mrs JM Orpen,
and the date as late 1899 or early 1900.
The site of the first planting was in No 13 Montagu
Avenue (formerly Cape Avenue), which later became No 23
Montagu Avenue, and subsequently No 23 Josiah Chinamano
Avenue. However, it appears from cuttings and notes
in another of Dick Petheram’s files, that Mrs JM Orpen became
the mother-in-law of André Holland’s grandfather, Mr AT
Holland, who had brought the jacaranda seedling with him
from Durban in South Africa, and presented it to his prospective
in-laws.] Indian
Connection?
In an article in the 1940s,
Swedish missionary Harald von Sicard suggested that in the
very early centuries AD there was possibly an Indian period
in this part of the world. In casting around for further evidence of this,
I was interested to read, in one of Roger Summers’ works,
the theory that Indian prospectors came to Zimbabwe in about
the 6th or 7th century to find an
alternative source of gold to the then rapidly diminishing
ore reserves in Mysore.
The theory is based largely on the evidence that
ancient Zimbabwean mining methods differed from those in
use anywhere else in Africa, but were very close to those
used in southern India. Of more direct relevance to
trees, however, was Summers’ further theory that while initial
prospecting at that time took place along the river valleys,
where alluvial samples were panned, traced up to their source,
and so on, detailed exploration of the gold-bearing areas
was guided to a considerable extent by observation of vegetation
patterns. We freely
acknowledge nowadays, of course, that vegetation can be
a useful indicator of all kinds of things.
But we have so many additional, modern, scientific
aids that we tend to overlook the extent to which trees
might well have guided—and even controlled, to some degree—the
steps and activities of mankind so long ago, in spheres
other than the obvious ones of food, shelter, and medicine. This brings us to the often-heard
theory that this, that, or the other species of tree was
introduced by early explorers and traders, but only in a
few cases can one get much in the way of convincing evidence.
As early as 1905 Richard Nicklin Hall (1853-1914)
included in his writings on ancient ruins the observation
that the ancients might have introduced the mahobohobo or
muzhanje (Uapaca
kirkiana), and grown it around the mines.
There are similar claims for other trees. [Comment 2002: See The
Ancient Ruins of Rhodesia by RN Hall and WG Neal, first
published in 1904, and reprinted in 1972 in the Books of
Rhodesia “Gold Series”.] Summers suggested with some
logic, however, that the noticeable presence of some indigenous
fruit trees in the vicinity of ancient workings could be
(and I quote) “due to the fortuitous introduction by the
mining populations. He
pointed out that fig trees stand out in many places, not
necessarily because they were planted there, but because
they survive fires best in protected places such as the
depressions that mark ancient workings, and the so-called
“slave pits” of Nyanga. Portuguese
Connection
There seems to be no doubt,
however, that the old Mazowe lemons were introduced, and,
I suppose, more probably by the Portuguese in this
country than by the Arabs or anyone else, notwithstanding
their east Asian origin. Lemon groves are closely associated with some
of the 16th- and 17th-century Portuguese
forts and trading centres in present-day Zimbabwe.
Dambarare (or Dandebara), one of their three most
important trading centres, was described by Barreto in 1667
as “a noble settlement and good-sized town in the heart
of Makaranga, [which] has grown to be the centre of that
conquest, with many rich inhabitants.”
The Dambarare site is within 50 kilometres of present-day
Harare. Its ruins are on the farm Doxford, near the
Jumbo Mine. The
lemons are still there.
They are also near an old Portuguese fort on the
Angwa River near Mhangura—not so very far from our favourite
“lemon forest” at Ditchwe. [Comment 2002: The Barreto referred to above was the Jesuit,
Father Manuel Barreto.
Whether the lemons, or any other fruit trees, were
deliberately planted or simply grew from discarded seeds
is a matter for speculation—and no final answer.] I might add that old issues
of The Rhodesia Agricultural
Journal show that in the early 1900s the Mazowe lemon
stock was commonly being used by our horticulturists for
the budding of other varieties of citrus. Another tree associated with
the Portuguese, and sometimes with the Arabs, is Ziziphus mauritiana, known to the Shona people as musau or musawu. Some-times it is known
in English as Portuguese apple.
The fruit of this tree makes the most potent, gin-like
drink called kachaso—a real scalp raiser, judging by
the couple of gulps my wife and I once had.
The Portuguese taught the African people along the
Zambezi how to distil it through a gun barrel (WV Brelsford).
In recent years the fruit has been exploited commercially,
and a rather less explosive version of kachaso was marketed
successfully in the high-density urban areas until it became
difficult to get the fruit up from the Zambezi valley. Literature on the Rhamnaceae
contained in the Flora
of Tropical East Africa series from Kew in 1972 confirms
that Ziziphus mauritiana is not
known to be indigenous to Africa.
It gives as its probable origin the Middle East or
the Indian subcontinent. [Comment 2002: DJ Mabberley (1993), The Plant-Book, has Z. mauritiana
as indigenous to India, where it is known as ber.] Rare trees, or rare species,
also evoke suppositions of introduction by man. The raphia palm (Raphia farinifera)
is one such, but I am informed that its rarity in Zimbabwe
stems simply from the fact that Zimbabwe is the southernmost
limit of its range on the African continent.
The same applies to the picturesque bottle palm (Borassus
aethiopum). The
tamarind (Tamarindus indica), widely thought to
have been introduced into Africa by man, is also acknowledged
as indigenous by the authorities.
So is Bivinia jalbertii, a Madagascan species
isolated in Zimbabwe in the southeast lowveld. [Comment 2002: B. jalbertii
is reported in Flora
Zambesiaca Vol 1, Part 1, as occurring in Zimbabwe,
Mozambique, Tanzania, Kenya, and Madagascar.
In Dale & Greenway (1961), Kenya
Trees and Shrubs, it is spelt as B.
jaubertii, but Flora Zambesiaca makes it clear that this
is incorrect. What
is interesting is that Mabberley (1993),
The Plant-Book,
does not list Bivinia at all, but does list Calantica, and Flora Zambesiaca
has Calantica
jalbertii as a synonym of Bivinia
jalbertii. In the mid 1990s there was a certain amount of concern that B. jalbertii was on the verge of a name
change, but nothing seems to have happened so far.] On the other hand, the so-called
horseradish tree, Moringa
oleifera, of the Mana Pools area, is regarded as having
been introduced—and also the physic nut tree, Jatropha
curcas, which, I understand, is found at Diana’s Vow
near Rusape, and on similar kopje sites with ruins on them. [Comment 2002: According to Mabberley (1993), The Plant-Book, Moringa oleifera comes from northwest India, and Jatropha curcas from tropical America.] To be continued. kkk COMMITTEE MEMBERS’CONTACT TEL. NUMBERS HarareMark 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 BulawayoJonathan Timberlake Home 286529 The Tree Society’s e-mail address is Previous issues: Aims
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