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November 2007
331
JOURNAL
OF THE
TREE
SOCIETY OF ZIMBABWE
P.O BOX 2128
HARARE
TREE LIFE
MASHONALAND CALENDAR
November 6th: (1st Tuesday): No Botanic Garden Walk this month as Tom
is not available to lead us.
November 18th: (3rd Sunday): Jean Simon, Mt Hampden.
A return visit to an interesting place not far from town. Our thanks
go once again to Jean Simon.
Directions:
Take the Lomagundi Road out of Harare. When you get to the Westgate roundabout,
you turn north onto the Old Mazoe Road (pass two off-roads and exit at
the third as a right turn from your original route).
Travel on the old Mazoe road for 9km, 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 1.1km 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.
Bring lunch and chairs. We will meet as usual at 9.30 am.
November 24th: (4th Saturday): Cancelled
MATABELELAND CALENDAR
Please contact Jean Wiley or Gill Short for details of the next Matabeleland
function.
Outing to Christon Bank 16th September 2007
Christon Bank Nature Reserve, forms a part of the Harare Botanical Gardens.
It lies about 25km north of Harare, to the east of the Harare/Mazowe road.
It lies at an altitude of 1360m. It is dominated by Miombo woodland, and
lies in the incised headwaters of a minor tributary of the Mazowe River.
It is a granite area, with coarse light grey sandy soils. The area is
mixed woodland dominated by Brachystegia boehmii and Brachystegia spiciformis
in the flatter areas, and Brachystegia tamarindoides amongst the granite
kopjes. A steep stream cuts across the area. The outing was led by Meg
Coates Palgrave. Thank you for a good day, Meg.
In the car-park rather unusually, we came across Uapaca kirkiana and
Uapaca nitida standing side by side, and were able to compare the differences
in these two species. At the higher altitude of Harare, we are more used
to seeing Vernonia amygdalina, or the spectacular mauve-flowered Vernonia
myriantha. Here, at slightly lower altitude, we encountered Vernonia colorata.
Colorata can be distinguished from amygdalina by its less hairy seeds.
You need a 10-power hand lens and some seeds to spot this difference,
and to safely identify these two species. The area was rich in Ficus and
Strychnos species. Check the alphabetical list at the end for details.
We repeatedly on our outings around Harare come across the specific name
“goetzei”. On this day it was Elephantorrhiza goetzei and
Acacia goetzei. The question came up: “Where does goetzei come from?”
No one knew the answer. Walther Goetze was born in Leipzig, in Germany
on 25th June 1872. It seems that he was a photographer rather than a botanist.
He collected both botanical and zoological specimens. There are no recorded
reports or papers in his name. He collected widely in German East Africa
territory of Tanganyika, now Tanzania. His collection is housed in Meise
in Belgium. While on the Wentzel/Stiftung expediton to Lake Nyasa (Malawi)
and the Kinga Mountains, he died on 9th December 1899 of blackwater fever,
a form of malaria. He is buried in a lonely cemetery with three other
Germans, near the shores of Lake Malawi, close to the Tanzania/Mozambique
border. It is fitting that he is remembered today
Alphabetical list of 67 species recorded:
Acacia goetzei; Albizia antunesiana; Boscia salicifolia; Brachystegia
boehmii; Brachystegia spiciformis; Brachystegia tamarindoides; Bridelia
cathartica; Celtis africana; Combretum erythrophyllum; Combretum molle;
Combretum zeyheri; Commiphora marlothii; Commiphora mollis; Cussonia arborea;
Dalbergia nitidula; Dichrostachys cinerea subsp.; Diospyros kirkii; Diospyros
nummularia; Dombeya rotundifolia; Elephantorrhiza goetzei subsp; Erythrina
abyssinica; Euclea divinorum; Euclea natalensis subsp. acutifolia; Faurea
rochetiana; Ficus glumosa; Ficus ingens; Ficus natalensis; Ficus sur;
Ficus burkei; Flacourtia indica; Garcinia huillensis; Gardenia ternifolia;
Gymnosporia senegalensis; Hymenodictyon floribundum; Julbernardia globiflora;
Kirkia acuminata; Lannea discolor; Ilex mitis; Maerua triphylla; Margaritaria
discoidea; Mimusops zeyheri; Monotes glaber; Morella serrata; Ochna schweinfurthiana;
Olea europaea; Parinari curatellifolia; Pittosporum viridiflorum; Pleurostylia
africana; Protea angolensis; Protea welwitschii; Pseudolachnostylis maprouneifolia;
Psydrax livida; Pterocarpus rotundifolius; Rhamnus prinoides; Rhus longipes;
Rothmannia fischeri; Strychnos madagascariensis; Strychnos potatorum;
Strychnos spinosa; Syzygium cordatum; Terminalia sericea; Tricalysia niamniamensis;
Uapaca kirkiana; Uapaca nitida; Vernonia colorata; Ximenia caffra; Ziziphus
mucronata.
Bernard Beekes
THE RESURRECTION PLANT: MYROTHAMNUS FLABELLIFOLIUS
[The concluding part of an edited extract from an article in the September
2007 VeId & Flora. Ed.]
Recent collections of plants from locations in South Africa, Namibia,
Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Malawi show quite striking morphological variation
among the populations. While plants sourced from South Africa and Zimbabwe
are generally smaller, with small leaves, those sourced from Mozambique
and Malawi are much larger, with thick stems and large leaves. Two variants
of these larger plants seem to exist, one consisting of large leaves with
a thick bushy stipule sheath and another composed of large leaves but
with a thin and simple stipule sheath. In Namibia the plants seem to be
of intermediate size with longer leaves than those found in South Africa
and Zimbabwe.
The climate and geology of the regions where the populations are found
are quite different. M. flabellifolius is generally located on rocky inselbergs
or flat rock plateaus consisting of granite, shale, quartz or sandstone.
South African and Zimbabwean plants occur in regions experiencing annual
summer rainfall and tend to be found growing on rock plateaus where water
run-off is quite rapid. Consequently the root systems of the plants are
quite shallow. Namibian plants occur in much more arid regions experiencing
irregular summer rainfall -- possibly every two or more years. These plants
grow on rock inselbergs with extensive crevices in the rock face that
tend to trap water, and the plants possess extraordinarily extensive root
systems that extend into these crevices.
Plants from Mozambique and Malawi occur in a generally wetter climate
than the other populations, which may allow a number of growing periods
during the wetter months of the year compared to the annual or less than
annual growth periods that occur in South Africa and Zimbabwe and in Namibia
respectively. The large size of these plants may therefore reflect an
adaptation to more regular growth periods. These larger plants also have
extremely thick woody central stems, which indicate that the plants are
quite old (easily 50-100 years). Unfortunately it has proved difficult
to age the plants using dendrochronological techniques, according to Dr
Ed February, as they do not produce conventional tree ring patterns. Leaf
litter, mammal droppings and other debris are observed to accumulate around
the base of many M. flabellifolius colonies. This debris may provide an
important source of nutrients.
It is probable that at least five subspecies of M. flabellifolius occur
in Southern Africa that have adopted similar but not identical strategies
to colonize a range of inhospitable habitats. Plants from Zimbabwe and
Mozambique are so different from each other and from plants from Namibia
and South Africa that they may represent new species in the genus. It
is also evident that even with morphologically similar plants from Namibia
and South Africa that there exists phenolic and genetic variation. In
addition there is a rare and little known relative, M. moschata, which
grows in Madagascar. It would thus appear that a new classification of
M. flabellifolius throughout its geographic range is needed. This has
relevance to conservation strategies to protect regional populations against
excessive collection for medicinal and commercial usage.
A NEW BOOK
In Search of Remarkable Trees: On Safari in Southern Africa
by Thomas Pakenham
A new book, published by Jonathan Ball Publishers and just launched last
month, is an inspiring collection of the largest, oldest and most fabled
trees of Southern Africa and Madagascar, set against the stunningly photogenic
backdrop of native wildlife and landscape.
Thomas Pakenham, no stranger to Africa with his award-winning books, The
Scramble for Africa and The Boer War, not to mention trees with his best-selling
Meetings with Remarkable Trees and Remarkable Trees of the World, combines
his two interests on safari in Southern Africa in pursuit of remarkable
trees. His particular quarry is the rare, the giant, the very old, the
extraordinary, or the simply beautiful, or those trees imbued with significance,
written about by the great explorers of the past, or associated with magic,
or folklore, or ritual.
The result is a highly individual book, the product of a brilliant photographer
and an original mind. In an opening section, he describes his journey
and its extraordinary moments of drama and even danger -- scaling trees
to escape enraged wildlife -- and those moments of triumph as he stands
in awe before a tree, connected by some primitive, atavistic bond. It
is those moments the reader shares in the resulting photographs. The texts
that accompany each image are as individual as his photographs, a beautifully
crafted blend of botany and social history.
Thomas Pakenham is the author of the critically acclaimed The Scramble
for Africa, which won the Alan Paton award. His first book on trees, Meetings
with Remarkable Trees, published in 1996, received international acclaim
and was made into an often-repeated television series with the same name.
Remarkable Trees of the World followed in 2002 and was an international
bestseller, as was The Remarkable Baobab. Pakenham lives in Ireland.
COMMITTEE MEMBERS’
CONTACT TEL. NUMBERS
Harare
Mark Hyde Home 745263
Cell 091 233751
Ruth Evans Home 331198
Terry Fallon Home 778789
Eva Keller Home 339368
Richard Oulton Home 882792
Mimi Rowe Home 882719
The Tree Society’s e-mail address is
petra@mango.zw (Ruth Evans)
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