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TREE LIFE
June 2009
346
MASHONALAND CALENDAR
Sunday 21st June: Main outing
We shall be visiting Anita and Peter Vorster's place, Mfuti.
Directions: Proceed along the Mutoko Road. At about 18km, turn right into
Cromlet Road (Pig Industries Board). After 4 and a half km, signpost on
right to Mfuti.
We shall meet at 9:30 am. Please bring a chair and your lunch.
???
Trees as Biofuel
Those who think the main use for willow trees is to provide the raw material
for cricket bats are in for a surprise. Short rotation coppice willow
(SRC) (Salvia viminalis) is being grown as a fuel for a new biomass-powered
power station in Scotland.
As an energy crop, SRC willow has vigorous juvenile growth thanks to its
ability to coppice, or resprout, from the stump remaining after harvest.
The crop is established from cuttings produced by specialist nurseries,
planted in the spring and cut to ground level at the end of the first
year to promote the development of multi-stemmed stumps. Growth is extremely
fast after cutback, as high as 4m in the first year. Under UK conditions,
it grows to 6 or 7m in three years.
SRC can be harvested on a three-year cycle and has a viable life of 19
to 25 years. Yields vary depending on the site, weather and other factors,
but can be expected to be in the range of 21 to 36 tonnes of dry-matter
per harvest or 7 to 12t/ha of dry-matter per year.
SCR dry-matter has an energy content of roughly 19MJ/kg, or 45% of the
energy in an equivalent volume of light fuel oil. This gives a mean annual
energy production equivalent to 3 300 to 5 700 litres of oil per hectare.
The willow, a renewable biomass crop, which will be used to feed the groundbreaking
Stevens Croft power station in Lockerbie, Scotland. The largest wood-fired
power station in the UK, Stevens Croft has a 44MW capacity and will burn
a mixture of forest residue and specially grown SRC willow. A biomass-powered
station on this scale could power up to 70 000 homes, and create up to
340 jobs at the station itself and in forestry, sawmilling and agriculture.
Almost all the fuel will be sourced from within a 100km radius of the
plant.
Specialized machines are being developed to handle the requirements of
SRC willow production. A specialist header unit is an attachment for the
a range of forage harvesters. It is claimed the combination has a harvesting
capacity of over 8ha/day. The new header attaches very easily to existing
forage harvesters, like maize, grass and whole crop headers, so it doesn’t
take hours to modify the machine. Heavy-duty forestry feed rolls have
been developed so the machine can cope effectively with the tough material.
The new willow header was developed as a prototype in Yorkshire, UK, last
year. Since then it has been tested and refined and is now being manufactured
in the US. Fitted to a forage harvester, it can harvest coppice willow
at forward speeds of up to 12,5km/h. It is claimed it can tackle stems
of up to 200mm diameter and trees up to 12,5m tall!
Edited from the original in Farmer’s
Weekly of 27 March 2009.
Can You Help?
The Editor, Tree Life,
I am currently trying to map the distribution of miombo (Brachystegia/Julbernardia
formations) across southern Africa towards a general aim of better understanding
the distribution of the miombo specialist avifauna. While the Flora Zambesiaca
map (Wild & Barbosa 1968) shows where miombo is dominant over landscapes,
there are patches which are obviously too small to map at such broad scales.
These patches are important because many will be able to support small,
fragmented populations of some of the miombo specialists. The distribution
of the Mashona/Southern Hyliota is of particular interest because it was
discovered recently in the patch of miombo at Gundane Village in the eastern
Soutpansberg, northern South Africa. The hyliota is known to occur in
Zimbabwe only in well-developed miombo, and it probably breeds in northern
SA, but the patch is very small (c.20ha) and can only support a few pairs
of hyliotas. This is remarkable because it means that this tiny population
has either managed to hang in for a considerable time—since the
last palaeohistorical contraction of the Miombo Region—or it is
supported by immigration. (The other alternative is that there is more
habitat for it in northern SA—either more (unknown) patches of miombo,
or it is able to use other non-miombo vegetation which functions like
miombo.) It is known to move into riverine acacia in the southeast Lowveld
during the dry season, but these are probably only short-distance movements
(of birds from adjacent patches of miombo). The nearest known birds to
Gundane occur in B. glaucescens on Mutandahwe (375m asl) in the Save Valley
just north of the boundary to Gona-re-Zhou NP, some 200km away. It is
unlikely that birds make it to Gundane from n. Gona-re-Zhou, but there
might be other, unknown (sub) populations between northern Gona-re-Zhou
and Gundane. The distribution of B. glaucescens is of particular interest
since it can occur on even quite small kopjes in hot, low-lying areas,
especially in the southeast Lowveld, where these intercept the moist,
southeasterly airflow. Therefore its distribution on the granite inselberg
and kopje landscapes south of the watershed—from the Matobo Hills
to Bikita and northwards is important, but incompletely known.
I am writing therefore to ask if there is anyone who knows of stands/colonies—even
small ones—of B. glaucescens away from the Miombo Region (i.e. away
from the central plateau). In particular, (i) does anyone know of its
occurrence in the Gwaranyemba CLs west of Gwanda? Another potentially
important area is (ii) the Mateke Hills. A Rhodesian Schools Exploration
Society survey of this area did not find it, but it is a relatively large
area and a colony of B. glaucescens could have been overlooked. Have any
members visited these areas and botanised there? If members know of any
colonies in other areas away from the plateau, I would be grateful to
hear of them.
During the course of this enquiry, I have learned that much of the early
vegetation survey work was published in the Rhodesian Agricultural Journal—some
of this vegetation mapping is the only work that exists for much of the
country. I have tried to source this journal and have had difficulties
as it is not widely available even in South Africa. I recently visited
the Entomological Library of the Natural History Museum in London which
holds it, and having read through a selection of the issues, realised
fully what an important resource this is. So I am also writing to ask
if there are any members who have or know of anyone who has a set which
they are looking to off-load. I cannot say how the libraries and other
collections in Zim's research institutions are faring, but there are worrying
signs of a loss in integrity; e.g. the loss of the only known copies of
some data. These data are crucial for understanding fully the patterns
of distribution of Zimbabwe's biodiversity which is fundamental to the
correct management of its natural heritage. There is a real need for a
"stock-take", which will be a mammoth task, and until this can
be done, there is a need for consolidating data into collections that
can be looked after.
Yours sincerely,
Anthony Cizek
anthonycizek@mac.com
Note: I have used the RAJ in the Ministry of Agriculture’s library
on Borrowdale Road and can confirm that this collection is incomplete.
The most likely bet for a complete collection in Zimbabwe is the National
Archives.
- Ed.
MATABELELAND CALENDAR
Please contact Jean Wiley or Gill Short for details of the next Matabeleland
function.
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
Tree Life Editor Home 302812
or bkinsey@mango.zw
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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