Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Field Studies of Six Southern African Species of Erythrina

1979; Missouri Botanical Garden; Volume: 66; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2307/2398844

ISSN

2162-4372

Autores

A. Jacot Guillarmod, R. A. Jubb, C J Skead,

Tópico(s)

Flowering Plant Growth and Cultivation

Resumo

The Enjthrina species of southern Africa range from small suffrutices to tall trees, up to 24 m in height.One species is a geophyte.All possess brightly colored flowers in the scarlet, crimson and orange range, while some species produce a few plants bearing cream or almost white, pink, and a variety of red flowers.All species discussed appear to produce a fair to plentiful supply of nectar, and, from observation, several species of indigenous and exotic birds are the pollinating agents.The two species of Erythrina sect.Humeanae, E. humeana and E. zeyheri^ which have flowers that resemble those of the American hummingbird-pollinated species of the genus, are visited by sunbirds and white-eyes, whereas larger birds are also frequent at the flowers of the otlier species.The means of distribution of tlie usually brightly colored and poisonous seeds is unknown as yet.Some of the southern African Erythrina species have been known in cultivation for a considerable period of time.Erythrina humeana was grown in Europe more than 150 years ago, while one species, possibly E. caffra or JE.lysistemon, has been grown on the island of St. Helena for perhaps that length of time.Both these species grow easily from truncheons, and one can often see in southern Africa lines of such trees where they were once planted as protective fences or fence posts.That so little is known of the biology of these species is therefore surprising.The following observations have been compiled from casual observations by the authors and are supplemented by information gleaned from various books (Acocks, 1975; Batten & Bokelmann, 1966; Coates Palgrave, 1977; Gledhill, 1969; Hennessy, 1972) and that supplied by Mrs. E. F. Hennessy.Careful study may, quite possibly, alter some of these observations. Description of SpeciesErthyrina acanthocarpa E. Meyer is a low (about 1.5 m) straggling, very prickly-stemmed shrub, deciduous (as are all the other species), confined to an area of dry Cymbopogon-Themeda grassland around Queenstown, eastern Cape Province (Fig. 1) where it grows in quantity in some places.It is subject to frost and occasional snow.The leaves, bearing hooked prickles on the veins at the back of the leaflets, appear at the same time as the inflorescences, in October-November that is, in the southern African context, late spring.The flowers are borne on a stout peduncle produced on a short side shoot below the top of the shrub, or, less often, apparently tenninally.The racemes are fairly densely packed and held

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