Encephalartos
Encephalartos | |
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Encephalartos lebomboensis | |
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Genus: | Encephalartos |
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Geographical distribution of genus Encephalartos |
Encephalartos is a genus of cycad native to Africa. Several species of Encephalartos are commonly referred to as bread palms, bread tree or Kaffir bread since a bread-like starchy food can be prepared from the centre of the stem. The genus name is derived from the Greek words en (within), kephali (head), and artos (bread), referring to the use of the pith to make food. They are, in evolutionary terms, some of the most primitive living gymnosperms.
All the species of Encephalartos are endangered. The whole genus is listed under CITES Appendix I / EU Annex A, and CITES prohibits international trade in specimens of these species except when the purpose of the import is not commercial, for instance for scientific research.
Description
Several of the species possess stout trunks. In E. cycadifolius, the main trunks are up to 10 feet (3.0 m) high, and several of them may be united at a base where a former main trunk once grew. The persistent, pinnate leaves are arranged in a terminal spreading crown, or ascending. The rigid leaflets are variously spiny or incised along their margins.
Cones
Male cones are elongated, and three or four may appear at a time. Female cones are borne singly, or up to three at a time, and may weigh up to 60 pounds (27 kg). In some species, male cones with ripe pollen emit a nauseating odour. When the pollen has been shed and the males cones decay, a strong odour of acetic acid has also been noted.[1]
Roots
Colonies of the cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme occur in apparent symbiosis inside the root tissue,[1] while the rootlets produce root tubercles at ground level which harbour a mycorrhizal fungus of uncertain function,[1] which is however suspected to facilitate the capturing of nitrogen from the air.[2]
Food value
Human consumption
In several species the pith of the trunk contains a copious amount of high quality starch below the crown. This was formerly cut out by native people as food. Thunberg recorded around 1772 that the Hottentots removed the stem's pith at the crown and buried it wrapped in animal skin[2] for about two months, after which they recovered it for kneading into bread,[1] whence the vernacular name "broodboom" (i.e. bread tree). The burial of the pith apparently facilitated its fermentation and softening,[1] and the dough was lightly roasted over a coal fire.[3] In 1779 Paterson likewise found that the pith of a "large palm" near King William's Town was utilised by the Africans and Hottentots as bread. The pith was removed and left till sourish, before it was kneaded into bread.[1][4]
Animal food
Their large seeds consist of an often poisonous kernel covered by an edible fleshy layer.[2] Female cones are consequently destroyed by baboons, as they relish the pith around the seeds.[1] Monkeys, rodents and birds also feed on the seeds, but due to their unpredictable toxic qualities they are not recommended for human consumption.[2]
Insects
The early larval instars of some aposematic, day-flying looper moths are specific to cycads, and genus Encephalartos is one of their food plants.[5] They include the leopard magpie (most Encephalartos spp., other cycads, etc.), Millar's tiger (cultivated E. villosus), dimorphic tiger (cycads under forest canopy), spotted tigerlet (E. villosus), inflamed tigerlet (E. villosus), Staude's tigerlet (E. ngoyanus, cultivated E. villosus and Stangeria), pallid grey (E. natalensis). In cultivation various scale insects are known to attack the leaves of the genus. These include cycad aulacaspis scale, zamia scale and latania scale.[6]
Taxonomy
The genus was named by German botanist Johann Georg Christian Lehmann in 1834. All cycads except Cycas had been regarded as members of the genus Zamia until then, and some botanists continued to follow this line for many years after Lehmann had separated Encephalartos as a separate genus. His concept was originally much broader than the one accepted today, including also the Australian plants we now know as Macrozamia and Lepidozamia.[7]
Species
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/11/Encephalartos_sclavoi_reproductive_cone.jpg/150px-Encephalartos_sclavoi_reproductive_cone.jpg)
- Encephalartos aemulans
- Encephalartos altensteinii
- Encephalartos aplanatus
- Encephalartos arenarius
- Encephalartos barteri
- Encephalartos brevifoliolatus
- Encephalartos bubalinus
- Encephalartos caffer
- Encephalartos calsloanii
- Encephalartos cerinus
- Encephalartos chimanimaniensis
- Encephalartos concinnus
- Encephalartos cupidus
- Encephalartos cycadifolius
- Encephalartos delucanus
- Encephalartos dolomiticus
- Encephalartos dyerianus
- Encephalartos equatorialis
- Encephalartos eugene-maraisii
- Encephalartos ferox
- Encephalartos friderici-guilielmi
- Encephalartos ghellinckii
- Encephalartos gratus
- Encephalartos heenanii
- Encephalartos hildebrandtii
- Encephalartos hirsutus
- Encephalartos horridus
- Encephalartos humilis
- Encephalartos inopinus
- Encephalartos ituriensis
- Encephalartos kisambo
- Encephalartos laevifolius
- Encephalartos lanatus
- Encephalartos latifrons
- Encephalartos laurentianus
- Encephalartos lebomboensis
- Encephalartos lehmannii
- Encephalartos longifolius
- Encephalartos mackenziei
- Encephalartos macrostrobilus
- Encephalartos manikensis
- Encephalartos marunguensis
- Encephalartos middelburgensis
- Encephalartos msinganus
- Encephalartos munchii
- Encephalartos natalensis
- Encephalartos ngoyanus
- Encephalartos nubimontanus
- Encephalartos paucidentatus
- Encephalartos poggei
- Encephalartos princeps
- Encephalartos pterogonus
- Encephalartos relictus
- Encephalartos schaijesii
- Encephalartos schmitzii
- Encephalartos sclavoi
- Encephalartos senticosus
- Encephalartos septentrionalis
- Encephalartos tegulaneus
- Encephalartos transvenosus
- Encephalartos trispinosus
- Encephalartos turneri
- Encephalartos umbeluziensis
- Encephalartos villosus
- Encephalartos whitelockii
- Encephalartos woodii
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e f g Smith, Christo Albertyn (1966). Common Names of South African Plants. Botanical Survey Memoir. Vol. 35. Pretoria: The Government Printer. pp. 179, 264.
- ^ a b c d Palgrave, K.C. (1984). Trees of Southern Africa. Cape Town: Struik. p. 43. ISBN 0-86977-081-0.
- ^ Van Bart, Martiens (16 May 1987). "Kirstenbosch kweek nou ook broodbome vir die publiek". Die Burger. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
- ^ Paterson, William (1789), A Narrative of four Journeys into the Country of the Hottentots and Caffraria, in 1777-79
- ^ Donaldson, J. S.; Basenberg, J. D. (1995). "Life history and host range of the leopard magpie moth, Zerenopsis leopardina Felder (Lepidoptera: Geometridae)". African Entomology. 3 (2): 103–110. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
- ^ Miller, Douglass R.; Davidson, John A. (2005). Armored scale insect pests of trees and shrubs: (Hemiptera: Diaspididae). Ithaca (N.Y.): Cornell university press. p. 425. ISBN 0801442796.
- ^ Alice Notten (May 2002). "Encephalartos woodii Sander". Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden and South African National Biodiversity Institute. Retrieved 2006-11-16.
External links
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