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March 2008
334
JOURNAL
OF THE
TREE
SOCIETY OF ZIMBABWE
P.O BOX 2128
HARARE
TREE LIFE
MASHONALAND CALENDAR
March 16: (3rd Sunday): Christon Bank. A return visit to an interesting
place not far from town.
Directions: Take the Mazowe Road out of Harare turning right to Christon
Bank about 22.5km from Harare. Follow the tarred road right down past
the ZRP Police Post (on your right) ignoring all the various turn-offs
to right or left.Continue to the end of the tar (± 7 kms) and park
in the parking area on the right (the Botanical Reserve). As usual, wewill
meet at 9.30 a.m. in the car park.
MATABELELAND CALENDAR
Please contact Jean Wiley or Gill Short for details of the next Matabeleland
function.
NOTICE OF ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING
Notice is hereby given that the 58th Annual General Meeting of the Tree
Society of Zimbabwe will be held on Sunday, 18 May 2008 at 9.30 am.
The venue is still to be confirmed and will be announced in a later Tree
Life.
Any proposals/resolutions and nominations for office bearers should be
forwarded to PO Box A723, Avondale, Harare by Monday 12 May if possible,
although proposals and nominations will be accepted from the floor.
AGENDA
1. Notice convening the meeting
2. Apologies
3. Minutes of the 57th A.G.M.
4. Matters Arising
5. Chairman's Report
6. Treasurer's Report
7. Election of Committee Members
8. Any Other Business
SUBSCRIPTIONS ARE DUE NOW FOR 2008/09
Subscriptions for the year ending 31 March 2009 become payable on 1 April
2008.
The amounts are as follows.
Email $6 million
Printed copy: collected $18 million
Printed copy: posted $30 million
Although we give in the table the rates for preparing and sending printed
copies we would rather send out Tree Life by email because it is easier
and cheaper, and there is far less of a risk of cost overruns.
Once again, I must emphasise strongly that we do not want to lose members
as a result of these increases. Each year a number of members pay more
than the norm so that the excess goes anonymously to support members who
may be having financial difficulties. So, please do not be proud; talk
to Terry or me.
We would also very much prefer to receive the subscriptions in cash.
Payment may be made in the following ways:
1. at the Mukuvisi Woodland wildlife shop;
2. to the Treasurer, Terry Fallon, at 285 Samora Machel Avenue (tel: 778789);
3. to me, Mark Hyde, at Pentact, 3rd floor ZTA House, 95, Nelson Mandela
Avenue, Harare (tel: 708758).
4. To any other Committee member.
However, if paying by cheque, please make it out to CABS and on the reverse
‘Pay to the account of the Tree Society’.
Mark Hyde
OUTING TO MT HAMPDEN,
18 NOVEMBER 2007
The outing was led by Meg Coates-Palgrave and based at the home of Jean
Simon, at Mt Hampden, north of Harare. The area lies in the flat headwaters
of the Gwebi River. Most of the original miombo woodland has been cut
out and is now under cultivation. The area we visited on the southern
slope of Mt Hampden hill still retains a fair cover of old miombo woodland
dominated by Brachystegia spiciformis. Mt Hampden hill is an inselberg
of banded ironstone. Soils are red sandy loams. Thank you, Meg and Jean,
for an interesting day.
As always with any outing led by Meg, it was an intensive learning experience.
“Pick a leaf,” says Meg. For most of my adult life, I have
looked at trees and leaves, but never really looked at the leaves themselves.
I think that most of us are like that, but when you eventually “pick
a leaf” and study it, a whole new world of interesting shapes and
detail is revealed. Is it simple leaf? Is it a compound leaf? Is it once-compound,
once-pinnate–or is it twice compound, twice pinnate? The word “pinnate”
is derived from the Latin word “pinna”, meaning feather. Think
of the pinions of a soaring eagle! Look at the shape. Feel the texture.
What colour is it? Hold it up to the light and look through it. Crush
it and smell it.
Take Pavetta gardeniifolia, commonly called the stink gardenia. Its specific
name “gardeniifolia” means “gardenia like leaves”
because of the shape of its light green, simple obovate leaves. Crush
the leaf and smell the pungent scent. Hold a leaf up to the light and
see the black bacterial nodules characteristic of this species. A distinctive
feature of an Ochna schweinfurthiana leaf is the shape and colour of the
midrib. Feel the keeled shape of the upper and lower surfaces of the leaf’s
midrib. Feel how the upper leaf surface is ribbed and has a rough leathery
texture. Run your fingers along the finely serrated leaf margin, which
feels like a saw blade. See how the light yellowy-green midrib contrasts
with the bright shiny green upper surface.
An alphabetical list of the 29 species recorded:
Acacia sieberiana; Celtis africana; Brachystegia spiciformis; Combretum
molle; Cussonia arborea; Diospyros Iycioides; Dombeya rotundifolia; Ekebergia
benguelensis; Erythrina abyssinica; Euclea natalensis sub acutifolia;
Ficus burkei; Ficus sur; Gymnosporia senegalensis; Khaya anthotheca; Lannea
edulis; Lannea discolor; Ochna puberula; Ochnaschweinfurthiana; Parinari
curatellifolia; Pavetta gardeniifolia; Phoenix reclinata; Pittosporum
viridiflorum; Psorospermum febrifugum; Rhus longipes; Senna singueana;
Tapiphyllum velutinum; Uapaca kirkiana; Vangueriopsis lanciflora; and
Vernonia myriantha.
Bernard Beekes
INVASIVE ALIEN PLANTS IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
In this next in the series on invasive aliens, researcher Lesley Henderson
discusses several families of invasive alien plant species that occur
in southern Africa.
–Ed.
Terminology and Overview of Species
Southern Africa has a long history of problem plants which have been variously
called ‘weeds’, ‘pest plants’, ‘plant invaders’,
‘invasive plants’, ‘bush encroachers’, ‘naturalised
exotics or aliens’, ‘environmental weeds’, ‘transformers’,
and others. The terms have been used to describe both indigenous plants
(native, belonging to southern Africa) and non-indigenous plants (exotic,
alien, introduced to southern Africa).
History
Non-indigenous or alien plants were first introduced to southern Africa
between one and two thousand years ago. These were plants mainly of central
and northern African origin and were associated with human activities.
Most plants from other continents were introduced to southern Africa by
European colonists from 1652 onwards. The first control campaign against
an alien plant in South Africa was initiated in 1860 against spiny cocklebur,
Xanthium spinosum.
Terminology
Much confusion exists in the English-language literature on plant invasions
concerning the terms ‘naturalised’ and ‘invasive’
and their associated concepts. Richardson et al. (2000) have provided
definitions that they hope will permit widespread application and acceptance
and these are given here in part.
Introduction implies that a plant or its propagule has overcome, through
human agency, a major geographical barrier (intercontinental or infra-continental--usually
>100km).
Alien plants are plant taxa in a given area, the presence of which there
is due to intentional or accidental introduction as a result of human
activity.
Casual alien plants do not form self-replacing populations and rely on
repeated introductions for their persistence.
Naturalised plants are alien plants that reproduce consistently and sustain
populations over many life cycles without direct intervention by humans.
Weeds are plants (not necessarily alien) that grow where they are not
wanted and that usually have detectable economic or environmental effects.
Many indigenous pioneering species are weeds of disturbed sites such as
roadsides, overgrazed land, and waste places. Alien weeds occur in the
same disturbed sites and are also common in cultivated lands, planted
pastures, and lawns.
Environmental weeds are alien plants that invade natural vegetation, usually
adversely affecting native biodiversity and ecosystem functioning.
Invasive plants, plant invaders or invader plants usually refer to naturalised
alien plants that have the ability to produce offspring, often in very
large numbers, at considerable distances from parent plants. The most
aggressive invaders can spread far from parent plants and cover large
areas. The most damaging invaders may be termed transformers as they can
change the character, condition, form, or nature of ecosystems over substantial
areas. In southern Africa the term ‘invasive’ has sometimes
been applied to indigenous species where distribution or density has increased
in response to human-induced changes in the environment. Indigenous woody
species that invade overgrazed land are referred to as bush encroachers.
Invasive Plant Lists
The most comprehensive listing of weeds and invasive plants in southern
Africa was published by Wells et al. (1986) in their Catalogue of problem
plants of southern Africa. The catalogue lists 1,653 taxa (species and
varieties or subspecies) of indigenous and alien plants. The catalogue
includes a list of 984 ‘naturalized exotics’, which contains
789 plant taxa that are generally agreed to be both alien and naturalised,
a further 91 taxa where naturalisation is uncertain, and 104 taxa of uncertain
origin. The great majority of these plants are herbaceous and invade sites
of severe human disturbance. They are classified as ruderal weeds (=of
waste places) and agrestal weeds (=of cultivated lands). Approximately
10% are classified as flora weeds—alien invasive species competing
with the indigenous flora.
Arnold & De Wet (1993), Plants of southern Africa: names and distribution,
lists 858 taxa of naturalised alien species that are catalogued in the
Pretoria National Herbarium.
The next most comprehensive catalogue of naturalised alien species is
probably that contained in the Southern African Plant Invaders Atlas (SAPIA)
Database, which is managed by the author. The SAPIA database currently
contains 500 species, of which 200 are not listed by Wells et al. (1986).
Not all of these species have become truly naturalised; some are occasional
garden escapees that require considerable disturbance to become established.
However, they are all regarded as worthy of listing, as they could become
the invaders of the future. All the species in the SAPIA database have
been recorded in natural or disturbed sites, excluding cultivated lands.
Invasive Species
At least 1,000 alien plant species are known to be naturalised in South
Africa. About 200 (20%) of these species are regarded as important environmental
weeds invading natural or near-natural habitats. They represent 53 families
and 113 genera. The following nine plant families contribute 61% of the
species:
Fabaceae (legumes)
Asteraceae (daisies)
Myrtaceae (eucalyptus/myrtle family)
Solanaceae (potato family)
Cactaceae (cacti)
Pinaceae (pines)
Poaceae (grasses)
Rosaceae (rose family)
Convolvulaceae (bindweed family)
Acacia, with thirteen species, is the most important genus, followed by
Eucalyptus and Pinus, with seven and eight species respectively.
Sixty-five per cent of the major environmental weeds are trees or shrubs,
and 90% of species are perennials. Most species originate from South and
Central America (38%), Europe and Asia (32%), and Australia (15%). Each
major biome or vegetation type has a characteristic set of major invaders,
some of which are virtually exclusive to that biome, for example, Hakea
sericea (silky hakea) and Pinus pinaster (cluster pine) in fynbos, Chromolaena
odorata (triffid weed) and Lantana camara (lantana) in savanna, and Pyracantha
angustifolia (orange firethorn) in grassland. Some species are found in
several biomes, for example, the cactus Opuntia ficus-indica (sweet prickly
pear). Several very widespread invaders owe their extensive distribution
to their spread along river systems; examples include Acacia mearnsii
(black wattle) and Sesbania punicea (red sesbania).
Extent of Invasion
The extent of plant invasions is difficult to assess. There have been
various surveys done, but comparing statistics is complicated by the variety
of measures used. It appears that aquatic habitats are the most severely
invaded, followed by watercourses, and—in South Africa--the winter-rainfall
region. The summer-rainfall, subtropical coastal belt would be next, followed
by the escarpment and the Northern Province.
Worst Offenders
Some of the most widespread invaders in South Africa include Acacia mearnsii,
the black wattle, which is naturalised in some 21% of the region. Prosopis
spp., known as prosopis or mesquite, have invaded some 19% of the total
area. Acacia cyclops, red-eye or rooikrans, is present in some 8% of the
total area. It stretches along almost the entire Cape coastline, a distance
exceeding 2,000km.
Lesley Henderson
Source: SABONET News 6.2: 84
ARNOLD, T.H. & DE WET, B.C., (eds). 1993. Plants of southern Africa:
names and distribution, Memoirs of the Botanical Survey of South Africa
No. 62
RICHARDSON, D.M., PYŠEK, P., REJMANEK, M., BARBOUR, M.G., PANETTA,
F.D. & WEST, C.J. 2000. Naturalization and invasion of alien plants:
concepts and definitions. Diversity and Distributions 6, 93–107.
WELLS, M.J., BALSINHAS, A.A., JOFFE, H., ENGELBRECHT, V.M., HARDING, G.
& STIRTON, C.H. 1986. Catalogue of problem plants of southern Africa.
Memoirs of the Botanical Survey of South Africa No. 53.
???
INVADER-ANIMAL INTERACTIONS:
THE CHOMOLAENA STORY
What do a reptile, an alien plant and sex have in common? The reptile
referred to here is the Nile crocodile; the alien plant is Chromolaena;
and sex? Well, reference here is to the sex ratios of hatchling crocodiles.
But first a little more about the Nile crocodile and then about Chromolaena
itself and the interaction between the two.
Crocodilians belong to the great group of archosaurs, also referred to
as the 'ruling reptiles'. Crocodiles and alligators are found between
the latitudes of Cancer and Capricorn (23.5º north and south), in
the rivers and lakes of South America, Africa, Asia and Australia. The
Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus), is one of three species inhabiting
Africa and is widespread throughout the continent south of the Sahara.
Nile crocodiles have wide habitat preferences, reflecting their success
and distribution as a species. They are present in a variety of wetland
habitats, including rivers, lakes, swamps and brackish water, and are
even found in coastal areas of west and southern Africa.
As we know, crocodilians are highly efficient predators. They have powerfully
constructed armour-plated bodies, stout limbs, streamlined tails, impressive
bony heads and extremely strong, tooth-studded jaws; every tooth in their
jaws is adapted for catching and holding prey. Added to this is the fact
that they are 'opportunistic' hunters - they will eat pretty much whatever
comes their way.
A number of studies have revealed that the reproductive cycle of crocodilians
is very complex and also the most advanced among all the reptiles. Crocodilians
in the wild nest every two to three years. Sexual maturity is both size
and age dependent, and unlike mammals and birds; the sex of whose embryos
is determined at the moment of fertilisation, the embryo within a newly
laid crocodilian egg is without sex – sex determination depends
entirely on the temperature at which the egg is incubated. Cooler nests
produce more females and warmer nests produce more males, so a nest could
produce an entire clutch of female hatchlings, male hatchlings, or a mixture
of both. A difference of 0.5 - 1ºC in incubation temperature results
in markedly different sex ratios. Consequently, where the female digs
her nest and when she lays her eggs have major effects on the sex ratio
of her offspring.
The critical temperature varies among species but all crocodilians, whether
they live in Himalayan mountain streams, tropical jungles or temperate
swamps, incubate their eggs at temperatures close to 30ºC. Exposure
to temperatures below 27°C and above 34°C kills embryos of most
species.
A number of surveys for Nile crocodiles have been conducted in recent
years, and information on crocodile status is 'average'. However, for
25 out of 39 African countries there is inadequate information. Hide-
hunting in the mid-1900s at a time when the Nile crocodile was classified
as vermin, caused dramatic declines in populations throughout most of
its range, resulting in it being listed on Appendix 1 of CITES in 1975.
However, protection by national laws and international regulations has
resulted in a recovery in many parts of the species' range. By 1985, due
to the crocodile's recovery, expanding human populations and the high
value placed on crocodile skin, pressure to recommence exploitation induced
CITES to introduce a quota scheme under which a limited number of wild
crocodile skins could be exported annually.
The Nile crocodile, because it produces what is considered a ‘classic’
hide, is one of the most commercially utilized species of crocodilians.
World trade numbered 80,000 skins annually in 1993, with the majority
coming from crocodile ranching in Zimbabwe (54%) and South Africa (15%).
Commercial utilization is now widespread and many successful management
programmes have been established. However, there are still a number of
factors threatening Nile crocodile populations throughout Africa, one
being conflict with people. Man and crocodiles compete for suitable habitat
and for certain food items such as fish.
We all too often hear how vital habitats for both fauna and flora are
altered and destroyed by man. A particularly bad example is the accidental
introduction of an alien plant--Chromolaena odorata (a perennial, scrambling
shrub in the Aster family, also known by numerous common names: Siam weed,
bitter bush, Christmas bush, Jack in the Bush, and Triffid weed) into
South Africa that is invading crocodile nesting sites. [Triffid weeds
were walking, man-eating plants in the science-fiction book, The Day of
the Triffids, written by British author John Wyndham in the 1950s. The
name was adopted for Chromolaena because of the plant’s monstrous,
alien-invading characteristics! -Ed] Not only is the plant preventing
crocodiles from nesting in some traditional nesting areas, but it is also
casting dense shade on others, thereby reducing the incubation temperature
and thus altering the sex ratio of the developing hatchlings. More female
hatchlings resulting from the cooler incubation temperatures experienced
could lead to eventual extirpation of the species from the nesting areas
affected. Chromolaena is also reported to be spreading into Mozambique,
Zimbabwe and Botswana - other countries with Nile crocodile populations
- so the problem may very well be regional. 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.
Chromolaena is a herbaceous perennial native to the Neotropics. It occurs
as both a shrub standing at least 3 metres tall in the open, and as a
scrambler reaching a height of 10 metres among trees. It grows rapidly
and produces massive quantities of small, light seeds – more than
a million per plant – which are dispersed over long distances by
wind, and also by humans, animals and water.
Stems reach 2cm in diameter. The plants are maintained by a system of
abundant, yellowish, fine lateral roots. Multiple sprouts arise from the
root crown and lower stems. The individual branches are long with relatively
few branches. Foliage occurs only on recent growth. The opposite, three-nerved
leaves are deltoid to ovate-lanciolate, usually with a dentate margin
and a long pointed tip. The leaves are aromatic when crushed. The inflorescences
are corymbs of cylindrical heads located on the terminals of lateral branches.
There are 15 to 25 tubular florets per head, white, lavender, pink, or
blue in color.
The plant thrives on disturbed land and readily invades crops, pastures
and plantations. It tends to form dense thickets, which smother indigenous
vegetation and increase the intensity of fire. In Africa there are two
centres of invasion, each with a distinct form – or biotype –
of Chromolaena. The west African form was introduced from an invasive
population of chromolaena in south-east Asia, while the morphologically
different southern African form apparently originated from a northern
Caribbean island, possibly Jamaica.
It occurs in most areas below 1000m elevation from southern Florida to
north-western Argentina, but it is not a problem in its place of origin.
It is a plant of 'secondary succession' in that it invades clearings and
persists until shaded out by the overgrowth of forest trees. In the New
World, the species is controlled by a number of factors, including attack
by native insects, other arthropods and diseases, together with competition
from related plants. However, due to the absence of these species-specific
factors, the plant has naturalized in parts of Africa and elsewhere, where
it has become an incredibly successful exotic species and a noxious weed.
Chromolaena is incredibly fast growing, is quite difficult to detect,
and is capable of vegetative reproduction (ie, where a new plant can grow
from a piece of root stock). It produces huge numbers of largely wind-dispersed
seeds—aided by their small brown parachutes, has a number of genetic
strains, and has lots of close relatives. It also promotes fires and is
fairly catholic in the habitats it can grow in. It is an invader of primarily
the tropical and subtropical forested areas that harbour most of the world's
biodiversity usually found in the less-developed countries that have some
of the world's most rapidly increasing human populations and concomitant
increases in human pressure.
It is thought to have been mistakenly introduced to South Africa in seed-contaminated
packing materials offloaded at Durban Harbour during World War II. By
1986, invasion of the species had reached alarming proportions in the
entire KwaZulu-Natal coastal region. In the past two decades, it has spread
within South Africa, as well as in Swaziland, Mozambique, Zimbabwe and
Botswana. In South Africa, Chromolaena is primarily seen as a threat to
conservation, but it also impacts on forestry, pastoral agriculture and
other land uses.
The spread of Chromolaena has proceeded largely unchecked. Few private
landowners have had the interest to clear Chromolaena in its early stages
of invasion, or the resources to clear it at a later stage.
So what is being done about Chromolaena? The answer is plenty - but the
big question is, are we doing it fast enough? According to the Agricultural
Research Council (ARC) of South Africa, if Chromolaena is to be reduced
to manageable levels in southern Africa, several actions must be taken.
This includes the development of a coordinated clearance plan with increased
awareness and funding, and the release of biological control agents -
natural predators or parasites. With Chromolaena, this is tricky because
we do not know for certain where the southern African species originated
and it is therefore difficult to track down its natural predators. ARC's
biological control programme, in operation since 1988, has prioritised
ten insect species for investigation, and several pathogens collected
on Chromolaena plants in the Americas are also being examined for their
potential as biocontrol agents. Much is happening in the way of biocontrol,
but it is a slow, monotonous and expensive process.
In addition to all this vital research, much is also happening in the
form of manual removal and poisoning of the aliens in South Africa by
the 'Working for Water' programme (which began in 1995), a national programme
for controlling the 750 tree species and 8000 other plant species that
have been introduced into South Africa. This programme combines labour,
mechanical, chemical, controlled fire and biological treatments. Australia
has introduced a cost-sharing programme with land-owners to encourage
eradication.
Although South Africa has not as yet found a satisfactory biocontrol agent,
some other countries have been more successful. Chromolaena arrived in
Ghana in the late 1960s and, by the 1980s, had covered almost 60% of the
country's land area. A staggering statistic! Its weed status was luckily
very quickly realised and efforts involving biocontrol were made to control
it, particularly through the use of a defoliating arctiid moth obtained
from the University of Guam. The insect was released on Chromolaena plants
in an experimental field around the research centre in 1989, and ten years
later the insect had established itself as an effective natural enemy
of Chromolaena in many parts of Ghana, where the land invasion area is
now reduced to about 35%.
Not everyone sees Chromolaena as a problem weed. In Cameroon, local farmers
aver that the weed increases soil fertility, and in Ghana it is said to
have medicinal properties. The US Department of Agriculture reports that
the plant has moderate food value for large mammals. For such reasons,
and there are likely many more, it may be difficult to develop a coordinated
clearance plan within Africa.
So whether it is crocodiles, plantation crops, forests or pristine conservation
areas, Chromolaena is a serious threat worldwide and a concerted effort
is required to help combat the spread of this species.
[Based on an article, supplemented from other sources, by Dr Alison Leslie
that first appeared in Magnum Magazine, January 2001. Dr Leslie is an
Aquatic Ecologist in the Department of Nature Conservation at the University
of Stellenbosch, and a specialist in the ecology of crocodiles. See also
S. Matthews & K. Brandt, Africa Invaded: The growing danger of invasive
alien species, Global Invasive Species Programme 2004]
BULAWAYO’S HILLSIDE DAMS: UPDATE
Some of the email addresses for the Hillside Dams Project have had to
be changed. The website is still www.hillsidedams.com, but Rob Burrett’s
correct current email address is: estate@hillsidedams.com.
COMMITTEE MEMBERS’
CONTACT TEL. NUMBERS
Harare
Mark Hyde Home 745263
Cell 0912 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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