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September 2006
318
JOURNAL
OF THE
TREE
SOCIETY OF ZIMBABWE
P.O BOX 2128
HARARE
TREE LIFE
Please note that with immediate effect the post office box number for the
Tree Society has changed to:
P.O. BOX A 273 AVONDALE HARARE
MASHONALAND CALENDAR
Saturday 2nd September
Botanic Garden Walk. Tom will be away this month and therefore there will
be no walk.
Sunday 17th September Shenstone, Mt Hampden by kind permission of Jean
Simon.
We had an interesting visit there in April this year and we hope to find
more interest again this time
Instructions for getting to Shenstone, Mt Hampden.
Take the Lomagundi Rd out of Harare. When you get to the Westgate circle
you turn onto the Old Mazoe Road (pass two off roads and turn right at
the third).
Travel on the old Mazoe road for 9 km crossing the Gwebi river and at
the durawall you will turn right onto the Glenara Road (sign post missing).
Stick to left side of the narrow tar road (tar for walking, verge for
driving!) and when you get to 1.1 km from the turnoff, you will see two
white pillars hidden in the trees on your left side with a sign which
says:
Philip Marcou, Shenstone.
Come up the driveway to the house at the bottom of the hill. You can park
your cars on the lawn and walk from the house.
.Saturday 23rd September Mark will be away and therefore this walk is
cancelled.
Tuesday 3rd October Tom will still be away at this date and therefore
the walk is cancelled.
Sunday 15th October Possibly Thetford Estate.
Saturday 28th October Return visit to Mick Fleet’s property in the
Umwinsidale area.
???
MATABELELAND CALENDAR
Please contact Jean Wiley or Gill Short for details of the next Matabeleland
function.
EWANRIGG: 20 AUGUST 2006
In the last few years, we have been fairly regular visitors to Ewanrigg
Botanical Garden. So what is of interest? The area consists of low rocky
hills dissected by small valleys. There are many areas of cultivated flower
beds, many containing the species of aloe for which the Garden is well
known, and these are interspersed with some areas of remaining native
woodland.
The altitude is a bit lower than Harare, about 1300 m (4300 feet) although
the trees are generally similar.
13 members and guests assembled in a far car park and we split into two
groups. Meg Coates Palgrave kindly offered to take a beginners’
group and I led a more advanced group.
The cars were parked in msasa / mnondo woodland and in the understorey
were some species of interest. Firstly, the often striking Vernonia myriantha
(Eared vernonia). This has clusters of pale purplish flowers arranged
in wide flat-topped heads. In full flower it is a beautiful species although
often it does look rather a scruffy species in the wild. As far as I know,
it is never found in cultivation.
The ‘Eared’ part of the name refers to the very prominent
ear-like false stipules which arise at the bottom of the leaf stalks.
Although very noticeable early in the season they fall off and disappear
around flowering time giving the tree a quite different appearance.
One of the interesting, although often rather confusing things about places
like Ewanrigg, is that it is a mixture of planted and wild species, so
that one never knows whether a plant is native or not. It considerably
widens the options and makes identification more complex.
One example of this occurred straight away. On one of the trees near the
cars was the Leopard orchid, Ansellia africana. This frequently turns
up around Harare, e.g. in the Mukuvisi Woodland, and often one suspects
that it is planted.
Another common species was the Cheesewood, Pittosporum viridiflorum. This
is very often found around Harare as an evergreen shrub in the understorey
of woodland. The fruit is a yellow capsule containing orange sticky seeds.
Near the car park was a planted Tamarind, Tamarindus indica. Also there
was a planted Raffia palm, Raphia farinifera. This is famous for its extremely
long leaves, said to be the longest of any species in the world. These
fine planted specimens were bearing the huge pinnate leaves and also the
striking glossy dark brown fruits.
Worldwide this species occurs in E Africa and extends southwards to Zimbabwe
and Mozambique; it also occurs in Madagascar. In Zimbabwe, these palms
occur naturally in the ‘Palm block’ area of the northern Dyke
and also occur in the eastern districts. Coates Palgrave suggests that
these rather isolated colonies are relic populations from a once much
wider population.
Also planted was another native species, Oncoba spinosa (Fried egg flower).
Generally a species of lower altitude riverine vegetation, but there are
records from higher altitudes and the species certainly does well in gardens
around Harare. As we have seen at Val D’Or at an altitude of 1530
m. This tree was bearing the typical spherical fruits; these have an apical
disk-shaped stigma borne on a short stalk.
A short walk brought us to the herb garden. Few of these species have
relevance to the Tree Society as they are firstly mostly herbaceous and
secondly exotic species to us. Nevertheless it was still of interest to
walk around the circular lay-out ad where possible draw comparisons with
our native species.
The next stage of the walk took us through more miombo woodland. Here
were a number of small trees of the Pink jacaranda (Stereospermum kunthianum).
Often thought of as a low and medium-altitude species, it is fairly frequently
seen in the rocky hills around Harare, sometimes attaining surprisingly
high altitudes. The leaves are opposite and 1-pinnate. The bark is distinctive
with pale peeling patches. None of these trees was large enough to bear
flowers.
Also in the woodland were some apparently escaped specimens of a Cactus,
maybe the Queen of the Night. Again this sort of escape is characteristic
of a place such as Ewanrigg.
We emerged amongst the more formal flower beds and puzzled over some of
the cultivated trees and plants.
Cultivated trees are an area which the Tree Society could perhaps get
to know a bit better.
Lunch followed and afterwards, everyone departed for home.
All in all it was an interesting day. The Society’s very grateful
thanks go to Meg for leading the beginners’ group.
Mark Hyde
WHY ARE MISTLETOE LEAVES COLD?
On a recent tip to Mazvikadei it was noted that the mistletoe leaves
were colder than ambient temperature, and this peculiar behavior has been
noted on subsequent outings. Why are mistletoe leaves cold? Here are some
thoughts and observations on this subject.
When in 1976, we moved to our farm in Shurugwi, near Gweru, we planted
a pecan (Carya illinoensis) orchard. After about 12 to 15 years, mistletoe
(unknown, probably Tapinanthus sp) threatened to become a serious problem,
so we began a program of mistletoe eradication. We found that even small
mistletoes had roots which extended up to 1 to 2 meters into the host
branches. These roots, red in colour, grew between the cambium and the
xylem, allowed the xylem to grow around them, so that when the roots were
removed the root pattern was seen to be embedded into the xylem. In this
position, the mistletoe root was able to draw water from the xylem.
Google searches of the web led to many mistletoe references to cold leaves,
and high transpiration rates, but no direct explanations were found as
to why this should happen.
Mistletoes are obligate hemiparasites. They can not exist separate from
their hosts, and they get all of their moisture, and some, 10% to 60%,
in some cases 100%, of their carbon from their hosts. To do this they
must draw water from the host xylem and they must at all times maintain
a lower pressure within its root system, than in the host environment
surrounding the mistletoe root. If it does not do this the host would
drain it of its moisture and the parasite would quickly die. To understand
how this is done it is necessary to understand how tree plumbing works.
Imagine a tree 80 meters tall. It gets its moisture to the topmost leaves
as follows:-
Root pressure can generate pressures up to a maximum of about 6m. This
is done by osmosis, whereby relatively dilute solutions in the soil, try
to lower the sap concentrations within the root, via the root surface,
which is a semi-permeable membrane, thus forcing water into the roots.
Transpiration pull is the main agent for lifting water. Connecting the
root zone to the leaf zone are a series of xylem cells forming a system
of capillary sized tubes transporting water up to the leaves. Within the
leaves, these tubes are connected to the leaf stomata. Here a meniscus
is formed. It is this meniscus at the top of the cell column connected
to the roots that generates the power to lift. The tree’s power
to lift water depends upon the shape and surface tension of this meniscus.
The shape of the meniscus is controlled by the leaf design, and the transpiration
rate. A high rate of transpiration results in a high transpiration pull.
The “root” of a mistletoe is called an haustorium. Unlike
the root of a tree which takes up water by osmosis, the haustorium has
special cells which penetrate the host xylem cells and gain access to
the host’s water within the host xylem cells. To drive the water,
with its constituent mineral salts, into the haustorium requires transpiration
pull from the leaves. The stomata in mistletoe leaves are permanently
open to allow this constant need for transpiration. It is this constant
transpiration, needed to suck water from host to mistletoe, which causes
the leaves to be relatively cold.
Bernard Beekes
YELLOW AESCHYNOMENE AT GREYSTONE PARK
Those who attended the walk at Greystone Park on 22nd July 2006 will
remember the semi-floating aquatic plant with yellow flowers borne on
long stems.
At the time we thought it was a species of Aeschynomene and later work
on the specimen which we fished out, confirmed this.
It was in fact Aeschynomene fluitans, a species native to southern tropical
Africa and just reaching the north of Zimbabwe.
Although the species could have spread here as a native plant, I suspect
that it is more likely to be a cultivated aquatic which has escaped into
the Greystone Park Dam.
Perhaps this is the start of frequent occurrences of this very distinctive
species around Harare?
Mark Hyde
BOTANIC GARDEN WALK
5 AUGUST 2006
Tom’s subjects for the day were the families Ulmaceae and Sapindaceae.
The latter we only just started and I’ll leave the write-up for
a later Tree Life.
The Ulmaceae is a small family in Zimbabwe with only 3 genera: Celtis,
Chaetachme and Trema.
The main features are:
• always woody;
• stipules present;
• sometimes spiny (Chaetachme);
• leaves alternate, simple;
• leaves 3-veined from the base;
• monoecious or dioecious;
• sepals present but no petals;
• flowers usually unisexual (less often bisexual);
• ovary superior.
Of the three genera, Tom has no specimens of Trema in the garden –
none has survived!
Chaetachme has one species in Zimbabwe, C. aristata. This is the only
spiny Ulmaceae in Zimbabwe. The leaves are held in one plane and are exceptionally
glossy. It is a true forest edge species and seems to be quite local.
It grows, for example, at Murahwa’s Hill near Mutare.
The genus Celtis has three species in Zimbabwe.
The first we looked at was Celtis gomphophylla, the Rough-leaved white
stinkwood.
This is a large (to 40 m) rain forest species and is unusual among rain
forest species in being deciduous. The lower trunk is basically grey in
colour and covered in lenticels and has enormous buttress roots. The slash
has pink speckled flecks.
Perhaps the most remarkable feature of this species is that it has roots
which stink like bad toilets.
In Zimbabwe it occurs only in the E division.
Celtis mildbraedii, the Red-fruit white stinkwood is another Eastern districts
species, occurring in Zimbabwe only in the Chirinda Forest.
This is a ‘second storey’ tree in the understorey of evergreen
forests i.e. almost reaching the canopy. Tom called it ‘the rain
forest brother of C. africana’.
Unlike the other two species it is totally evergreen.
Near Dombe, Mozambique, however, it is a huge canopy tree.
The slash is not speckled but has maroon bands.
The final celtis is Celtis africana, the White stinkwood, a frequent and
widespread species in Zimbabwe. occurring in riverine forest and on rocky
outcrops.
Like the others the leaves are 3-veined from the base; they are also toothed
only in the upper part (a convenient character which distinguishes it
from Trema).
Once again, our thanks go to Tom for giving up his time for the Tree Society.
Mark Hyde
COMMITTEE MEMBERS’
CONTACT TEL. NUMBERS
Harare
Mark Hyde Home 745263
Cell 091 233751
Ruth Evans Home 331198
Terry Fallon Home 778789
Adele Hamilton Ritchie Home 744651
Eva Keller Home 339368
Richard Oulton Home 882792
Rob Burrett (away in SA)
The Tree Society’s e-mail address is
petra@mango.zw (Ruth Evans)
The Tree Society web site is
http://www.lind.org.zw/treesociety/index.htm
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