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January 2008 (no December issue)
332
JOURNAL
OF THE
TREE
SOCIETY OF ZIMBABWE
P.O BOX 2128
HARARE
TREE LIFE
MASHONALAND CALENDAR
January 20th (3rd Sunday): Mukuvisi Woodland
This month we are spending the day in the Mukuvisi Woodland, using the
Blatherwick Road entrance. This area is one of the Society’s favourite
places, combining some nice habitats, interesting trees and a rich herbaceous
flora. As we will be visiting at a wet time of the year, we hope to see
much of interest.
Directions: Take the Chiremba (Widdecombe) Road from Harare. Turn left
into Ford Road and continue for a short distance to the T-junction with
Blatherwick Road. The gate to the Woodlands is on the north side of Blatherwick
Road. Park inside. We will meet at 9.30 am. Bring a chair and your picnic
lunch.
January 26th (4th Saturday): Greystone Park Nature Reserve
This outing will also be at one of our favourite stamping grounds, namely
Greystone Park Nature Reserve.
Directions: To get there from the Borrowdale Road, turn right into Harare
Drive and continue for 4km, then turn left into Gaydon Road. After the
municipal offices on the hill and on the down slope, turn right into Halford.
If you reach Ettington Road on the left, you have gone about 500 metres
too far. The reserve is about 200 metres down Halford Road, where we will
meet at 2.30 pm.
MATABELELAND CALENDAR
Please contact Jean Wiley or Gill Short for details of the next Matabeleland
function.
STONE AGE ACACIAS
With respect to the on-going Acacia name-change saga, Tree Life readers
will be interested to know that research shows that people in KwaZulu-Natal
in South Africa were selecting Acacia for firewood before humans arrived
in Australia.
The date of about 60 000 years ago for the earliest evidence of Homo sapiens
in Australia is contested, whereas there is reliable evidence that good
fire fuels such as Acacia were being deliberately gathered and used in
hearths 60 000 years ago at Sibudu Cave, some 45km north of Durban.
Middle Stone Age research at Sibudu Cave is currently being undertaken
by a multi-disciplinary team of local and international scientists, under
the guidance of a team leader at the University of the Witwatersrand.
The archaeological project is aptly named ACACIA, an acronym for Ancient
Culture and Cognition in Africa. One of the aims is to investigate human
behaviour that can be considered modern; another is to document vegetation
change in the area. Identification of seeds and of charcoals has shown
the presence of both Acacia seeds and charcoal in deposits that have been
reliably dated, by optically stimulated luminescence of quartz grains,
to 60 000 years ago.
So the use of good Acacia ‘braai’ wood has a long history
in southern Africa.
THE WILD PEACH TREE
The wild peach, Kiggelaria africana, is an evergreen tree that belongs
to the Kei-apple family, Flacourtiaceae. When it grows in a forest, it
usually forms part of the forest undergrowth as a shrub, but as a free-standing
tree it can reach a height of over ten metres. It has a smooth grey bark,
which becomes flaky as it gets older. Its leaves are fairly narrow and
long with a smooth or slightly toothed edge and resemble the leaves of
a peach tree, hence its common name. They are shiny green above and a
lighter, often grey-green below. In young trees, the leaves are covered
in short grey hairs, which is lost in older individuals.
The wild peach is dioecious, meaning it has male and female flowers occurring
separately on different trees. The small, pale yellow-white female flowers
occur singly on little stalks on the female wild peach trees, while the
male trees produce male florets that arise in bunches from a nondescript,
bushy flower head.
The small, pale yellow-white female flowers occur singly on little stalks
on the female tree whereas the male florets arise in trusses from an untidy
looking, bushy inflorescence (flower head). The wild peach flowers from
June or July until as late as December. The globular green to yellow-green,
rough-skinned fruit, of course, is only found on female trees, suspended
from a stalk. The wild peach tree was named after Franz Kiggelaer, a Dutch
botanist, who lived from 1648 to 1722.
Ed: The following is an edited extract based on a piece by J. M. Claassens
in the March 2007 issue of Veld & Flora.
LIFE IN A WILD PEACH TREE
The wild peach tree, Kiggelaria africana, occurs not only in Zimbabwe
but also along the south and east coasts of South Africa, and quite far
inland, as well as north as far as Kenya. It thrives on the edges of forests
and is often encountered in ravines and rocky outcrops of grass-covered
mountain slopes.
Wild peach trees are also found in many gardens and parks and along roads.
They are not only good shade trees, but a rich assortment of wildlife
depends on these trees for survival. They are readily grown from seed,
and indeed, seedlings can be found growing under a female tree in abundance,
and are easily transplanted.
Uses for humans
The common Zimbabwean name for the tree–‘pinkwood’–derives
from its use for the extraction of a pink dye. The tree has also been
used for the extraction of hydrocyanic acid. The wood of the wild peach
tree is quite hard and tough and has been used in carpentry, in the manufacture
of farm implements and as building timber. The voortrekkers used it to
make spokes for wagon wheels, hence the Afrikaans name ‘speekhout’,
or ‘spokewood’.
A food web
The wild peach is the centre of a number of food chains that make up a
food web. Bees collect nectar from the flowers of the female tree and
nectar as well as pollen from the flowers of the male tree. In return
bees are responsible for pollination and ultimately for the formation
of the fruit of the wild peach.
Other insects may, of course, also play a role in pollination. Sweet-loving
ants enjoy free meals of nectar from the flowers, and many insects can
be seen sucking the sap of the leaves and the juicy tips of branches of
the tree.
The ripe fruit splits open, exposing the black seeds that are covered
in an orange-red, sticky material. Many different bird species–e.g.,
red-eyed turtledoves, red-winged starlings, mousebirds, and bulbuls–search
the tree for the seeds, swallowing them avidly. The seeds thus provide
a source of food for seed-eating birds, which in turn assist in dispersal
of seeds and hence in the spread of the wild peach.
The cyanide content of some parts of the wild peach renders it unpalatable
to most insects, but its leaves are a very important source of food for
the larvae of the garden acraea butterfly, Acraea horta, which is by far
the most common species associated with the wild peach tree in South Africa.
The larvae of the garden acraea feed on the leaves of the tree, but they
themselves serve as food for cuckoos and assassin bugs. The larvae and
pupae are also a source of food for the larvae of parasitic wasps, one
of which itself is parasitised by other wasps, and a parasitic bristle
fly.
Another South African butterfly, less common and more restricted in geographical
distribution, the battling glider Cymothoe alcimeda alicimeda also feeds
on the wild peach.
The fast-growing wild peach trees, apart from their inherent aesthetic
value, attract wildlife, offer comforting shade, act as dampers of noise
and dust pollution and often secure a measure of privacy between neighbours
… even in the smallest of suburban gardens.
They also provide for many fascinating interactions between themselves
and animal life that can be observed by those who love nature in all its
diversity of shapes, sounds, smells and movements, all of which change
from season to season.
Note: Young specimens of Kiggelaria Africana can be found at several
nurseries in the Harare area. –Ed.
Mary Clarke
Mary Clarke, one of the Tree Society’s long-standing members, passed
away in Port Alfred on 24th August after a 3-month illness.
Mary was exceptionally well-known in both the art and gardening worlds,
and as the author of her beautiful book, Nyanga Flowers, published in
1991. Trained as a geographer, Mary organized her book more on environmental
lines than botanical ones, and—with its seasonal arrangement of
materials—it remains an essential reference in identifying and appreciating
flowering plants throughout the Eastern Highlands. Nyanga was her home
for many years, during which time she touched so many people with her
love for the outdoors and the environmental issues of the area. She acted
as hostess to the Society when we visited her home on a memorable trip
to Nyanga in 2002. She also gave her full support to her husband Jim during
his long years as headmaster of Plumtree School.
A good friend of the Society as well as a wonderfully caring and clever
lady who will be greatly missed by all who knew her.
Our sympathies go to her family and particularly her husband Jim.
ALL ABOUT INVASIVE ALIENS, Pt. 1
All Zimbabweans know the water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) story,
and a visit to almost any large body of water—Lake Chivero, for
example—provides striking evidence of the impact of this species.
Another familiar aquatic invader, Kariba weed (Salvinia molesta), is actually
a woody fern species – the most economically destructive one in
the world. Few however will have heard of Chromolaena odorata, or triffid
weed, an alien plant introduced accidentally into South Africa, where
it is invading Nile crocodile nesting sites and is not only a primary
threat to conservation but also impacts on forestry, pastoral agriculture
and other land uses. Chromolaena is also now reportedly spreading into
Zimbabwe, where we have important Nile crocodile populations.
This is the first of a series on invasive alien species and their adverse
impacts, both in the region as a whole and in Zimbabwe in particular.
Here we focus on definitions and one classification scheme; next month
we shall move on to more specifics on species.
What are invasive species?
Invasive plant species dominate many marine, freshwater, and terrestrial
ecosystems throughout the world. Invasive species are defined as those
organisms that become established in a new environment, proliferate and
then spread in ways that are destructive to biodiversity and human interests.
Most invasions are a result of humans transporting organisms by from one
place to another, which may be intentional or unintentional. These invasive
species have a negative effect on the indigenous plants and animals, causing
declines in populations of threatened and endangered species, disease
outbreaks in human and animal populations, habitat alternation and loss,
increased frequency of fires, a shift in food webs and nutrient cycling,
a decline in fisheries, loss of agricultural crops and productive lands,
and reduced water supply. Invasive alien species are now recognised by
the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) to be among
the top four biggest threats to the maintenance of biological diversity
on the planet.
Categorizing invasive species
In South Africa, invasive alien plants are grouped into three main categories:
1. Remove and destroy immediately.
2. Can be grown if a ‘demarcation permit’ is acquired.
3. Established plants that do not require removal, but the species may
not be stocked by garden centres or planted.
According to the Southern African Plant Invaders Atlas (SAPIA) database,
the top 10 invaders in the region are:
1. Silver wattle (Acacia dealbata) -- a Category 2 invader.
2. Weeping willow (Salix babylonica) -- a Category 3 invader.
3. White poplar (Populus alba) -- a Category 2 invader.
4. Black wattle (Acacia mearnsii) -- a Category 2 invader.
5. Red sesbania (Sesbania punicea) -- a Category 1 invader.
6. Giant reed (Arundo donax) -- a Category 1 invader.
7. Green wattle (Acacia decurrens) -- a Category 2 invader.
8. Black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia) -- a Category 2 invader.
9. Fountain grass (Pennisetum setaceum) -- a Category 1 invader.
10. Pampas grass (Cortaderia selloana) -- a Category 2 invader, which
may surprise many gardeners!
Note the predominance of trees!
Bill Kinsey
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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