an ongoing monograph which contains some of the areas of
both knowledge and ignorance pertaining to this plant"
© 1999-2024 by Robert J. Baran
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TAXONOMY
Kingdom: Plantae, generally, stationary organisms which contain the green
pigment chlorophyll (which accomplishes photosynthesis, the manufacture of carbohydrates from carbon dioxide
and water in the presence of light), and which can have fairly unlimited cellular regeneration;
Division: Angiospermae, at least 250,000 named species of true flowering plants whose ovules are enclosed in carpels [with fossil evidence since at least the early Cretaceous Period, 146 to 97 Ma]; Clade: Magnoliidae, primitive flowering plants whose pollen grains have a single pore; Order: Caryophyllales, or Centrospermae, at least twenty-six families (Achatocarpaceae, Aizoaceae, Amaranthaceae, Ancistrocladaceae, Asteropeiaceae, Barbeuiaceae, Basellaceae, Cactaceae, Caryophyllaceae, Didiereaceae, Dioncophyllaceae, Droseraceae, Drosophyllaceae, Frankeniaceae, Giseckiaceae, Halophytaceae, Hectorellaceae, Limeaceae, Molluginaceae, Nepenthaceae, Nyctaginaceae, Physenaceae, Phytolaccaceae, Plumbaginaceae, Polygonaceae, Portulacaceae, Rhabdodendraceae, Sarcobataceae, Simmondsiaceae, Stegnospermataceae, Tamaricaceae). Improved and unique investigative techniques on the genetic and molecular levels have been resulting in changing views of these relationships), whose members include the cacti, carnations, bougainvillea, amaranth, sugar beet, pokeweed, and spinach. This group alone has in the vacuoles of the cells the water-soluble betalain pigments of betacyanins (beet red-purple) and betaxanthins (yellow, orange, orange-red). The flower ovary usually has free-central to basal placentation and the ovule integuments are twisted and bent. [Fossils date from at least the Maastrichtian age of the late Cretaceous Period, about 74 to 65 Ma, and possibly as early as the Albian, 111 to 104 Ma.]; Family: Portulacaceae Juss., the mostly herb-like purslane family, with either 16 or 21 genera (Amphipetalum, Anacampseros, Baitaria, Calandrinia, Calyptrotheca, Ceraria, Cistanthe, Claytonia, Grahamia, Lenzia, Lewisia, Lyallia, Montia, Portulaca, Portulacaria, Rumicastrum, Schreiteria, Silvaea, Talinella, Talinopsis, and Talinum) having 580 named species, all with a tendency toward thick or fleshy leaves; the tropical members are shrubby, and the majority are annuals [with fossils distinct from their close Cactaceae relatives no later than the early Tertiary Period, about 60 Ma] <older view>; Subfamily: Portulacarioideae Appleq. & R.S.Wallace, with the seven species of Portulacaria and Ceraria, is distributed in Angola, Moçambique, Namibia, Swaziland, and South Africa. (The other two subfamilies of Didiereaceae are Calyptrothecoideae, with the two species of Calyptrotheca from the dry parts of tropical north-east Africa, and Didiereoideae, with the other 11 species in this family from semi-arid areas in Madagascar.);
Genus: Portulacaria Jacq., resembling purslane or pig weed
(Portulaca oleracea, L., a notoriously
weedy trailing annual or perennial salad or pot herb. Portulaca is believed to be an import from
Brazil during historical times. But see also this for
pre-Columbian
existence in N America.);
Common: [Afrikaans:] Spekboom (lit., "fat pork tree"); [Chinese (romanization):] Mă chĭ xiàn shù; translations of the Chinese: Purslane tree, jade leaf, golden branch jade leaf, green jade tree, ginkgo tree, Gongsun tree, longevity lotus, jasper lotus, small leaf glass cui, etc.; [English:] Elephant's Food, Elephant Bush, Elephant Grass, Elephant-Plant, Olifantskos; Purslane Tree; Dwarf or Tiny Leaf Jade, Baby Jade [but RJB has also seen small rooted cuttings of Crassula offered as "Baby Jade" in the garden department of the Fountain, CO Lowe's, 11/31/2008); [French:] pourpier en arbre; [German:] Speckbaum, Geldbaum, Pfennigbaum, Elefantenbaum, Strauchportulak, Jadebaum; [Portuguese:] albero dei lardo; [Ronga:] sala-ni-marumbi; [siSwati:] SiDondwane; [Spanish:] Planta de la moneda; [Venda:] Tshilepwete; [Xhosa:] unFayesele, iGwanitsha (iGqwanitsha), gya-nese [Cape]; [Zulu:] isAmbilane, inDibili-enkulu, isiDondwane, isiCococo, inTelezi, iNdibili. The common names derive from the succulent nature of the plant's leaves and stout trunk, and also from the observation that elephants will browse upon this. It is said that in a feeding frenzy, the pachyderms will strip off all the leaves (and smaller branches) from this plant; but within a few weeks, the branches and trunks have begun to be covered again with a mantle of green. In fact, it forms 80% of the elephants' diet in the Addo National Park (see below). Each pachyderm consumes an average of 200 kg of food per day, but the plant is not "destroyed" as a result of this symbiotic relationship. In feeding, the elephant breaks off the branches, eats the succulent leaves and then discards the larger branches, which re-root themselves. The plant known to us as Portulacaria afra was first scientifically described by Nikolaus Joseph von Jacquin (1727-1817), an Austrian botanist and chemist, the most important of the younger contemporaries of Linneus (their correspondance began in 1759). Jacquin was the first writer in German to utilize this new system of binomial nomenclature, and was foremost in his time with respect to the number of new species described precisely and in a consistent way. He wrote at least ten major botanical works and a widely known textbook in general chemistry. He visited the West Indies and South America (1754-1759), participating in the first scientific expeditions to Central America which were financed by the Imperial Court. In 1768 he was appointed Professor of Botany and Chemistry and then became the second Director of the Botanical Gardens of the University of Vienna. We have not found any evidence that Jacquin personally visited Africa. P. afra was first illustrated from a rooted cutting in 1732 [some sources give the erroneous date of 1743] by Dr. Johann Jakob Dillenius, Oxford professor of botany, in his two-volume Hortus Elthamensis seu, plantarum rariorum quas in horto suo Elthami in Cantio coluit vir ornatissimus et praestantissimus Jacobus Sherard...Guilielmi P. M. frater, delineationes et descriptiones quarum historia vel plane non, vel imperfecte a rei herbariae scriptoribus tradita fuit (I. t. 101. f.120). Not having flowered, it was understandably thought to be a species of Crassula. Because of its ease of culture, it soon found its way into most of the famous gardens of Europe. In a short 5 February 1771 letter to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Linneaus himself mentions that "Crassula Portulacaria har blommat i Italien; ar ett species af Claytonia" ("Crassula Portulacaria has blossomed in Italy, it is a species of Claytonia). It is not known which Italian site had this honor. Jacquin in 1786 [some sources give the erroneous date of 1789] published the first colored illustration of it, with flowers, in his Collectanea ad botanicam, chemiam, et historiam naturalem spectantia, cum figuris in Vienna (1:160-162, [b&w here] image on 406). Therein he referred to it as an elegant shrub ("Elegantissima haec arbuscula"). Who brought the specimen(s) Jacquin classified and when? One specimen -- presumably in a greenhouse -- is recorded as having flowered in Vienna in the year of the French Revolution (1789). How did it end up in Vienna and what happened to it? Are there any plants alive today which can be traced back to cuttings from that tree? (Jacquin also named 32 genera, 23 species within those, and 169 other species plus another 8 varieties or subspecies. Monocots, dycots, and cycads were in his descriptions. Possibly his two most widely recognized named specimens are Ulmus parvifolia Jacq., the Chinese Elm, and Zinnia elegans Jacq., the common zinnia.) William Aiton's 1789 Hortus kewensis, or, A catalogue of the plants cultivated in the Royal Botanic Garden Kew lists Portulacaria afra aka Purslane-tree, on pg. 379, stating that the specimen "Cult. 1732, by James Sherard, M.D. Dillen elth. 120." James Sherard (1666-1738) in 1721 had brought the aforementioned German botanist Johann Jacob Dillenius to England and, in 1732, he published Dillenius' illustrated 2-volume catalog of Sherard's rare plant collection at Eltham. It was "the most important book to be published in England during the eighteenth century on the plants growing in a private garden" and a major work for the pre-Linnaean taxonomy of South African plants, notably the succulents of the Cape Province. It is not known how or when Sherard acquired his P. afra specimen, although he did make several trips to continental Europe in search of seeds for his garden, which soon became recognized as one of the finest in England. Are there any plants alive today which can be traced back to Sherard's garden? Could the Italian and Vienna specimens be traced back to Eltham? It seems possible that Sherard acquired his specimen from someone connected with the Dutch Cape Colony which had been in the area of what we now know as Cape Town since 1652. (The British wouldn't have a claim to the area before 1795.)
The 1807 edition of German botanist Friedrich Gottlieb
Dietrich's Vollständiges Lexicon der Gärtnerei und Botanik oder alphabetische Beschreibung vom Bau,
Wartung und Nutzen aller in- und ausländischen, ökonomischen, officinellen und zur Zierde dienenden Gewächse
included Portulacaria afra on pp.
467-468. The
sources for its info are given as "Portulacaria afra. Jacq. Collect. 1, t. 22. Ufeisanifcher(?)
Portulacbaum. Engl. Purslane-tree. Claytonia Portulacaria. Mant. 211. Crassula Portulacaria.
Spec. pl. 406. Dill. elth. t. 101, f. 120."
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ORIGIN Data extracted from the National Herbarium, Pretoria (PRE), Computerised Information System (PRECIS) as well as the Compton and Natal Herbaria. (Map prepared by E.M.A. Steyn and G.F. Smith) (Green dot at 28-17 on the grid is distribution of P. armiana, per Fig. 5 in Van Jaarsveld, 1984.)
From South Africa, where it grows, often in abundance in the drier parts of the Eastern Province -- especially
on the high plateau Karoo hill slopes or flats (c. 400 to 1,060 meters above sea level) -- and is particularly
prominent in the Addo bush to the south where there is tremendous summer heat. Its overall range extends
from the coast to elevations of 1,400 m (Guralnick, 2017).
The Addo Elephant National Park is
situated in the Eastern Cape Province 72 km by road from Port Elizabeth. Proclaimed in 1931 to save the last
11 survivors of the once numerous Eastern Cape elephants, the park consists of 12,126 hectares -- 30,315 acres --
of gently undulating Valley Bushveld dominated mostly by the Spekboom, which covers approximately 80% of the park
area. (Per Archibald, pg. 141, a survey in the early 1950s concluded that Spekboom covered "more than
90 per cent. of the total area" of [what was at that time] an approximately 17,000 acre park.) Some 500
species of plants are to be found in the park.
Elephants eat P. afra
from the top downwards allowing the plant to spread itself vegetatively by spreading horizontal branches at ground
level. Outside the park the same plants are eaten by goats who eat the plant from ground level upwards
preventing the plant from spreading vegetatively. Consequently these plants must rely solely on seed to
proliferate the species which often proves difficult in such a dry climate. As a result it was observed that
inside the park where the plant is subjected to browsing by elephants, Portulacaria afra survives and
spreads successfully, whereas outside the park the plant is becoming sparse as a result of overgrazing and poor
regeneration.
The Spekboom Succulent Thicket (aka Spekboomveld) is an area of some 5,011 sq.km. (about 1,935 sq. miles), 1.76% of which is conserved in some reserves such as at Graaff Reinet and on higher altitude slopes. The steep mountain slopes in the Eastern Cape and the eastern parts of the Western Cape receive perhaps 250 to 750 mm (9.8 to 29.5 inches) of rainfall per year, mainly in the autumn and spring. Temperatures are moderate, although extremes may be experienced for short periods. The thicket occurs on sandstone, quartzitic and shale substrata, which gives rise to shallow soils. Spekboom can form pure stands, but usually dominates (90%) a dense scrub which includes woody shrubs, succulent herbs and grasses. Very common in some places, though much more so in days past before overgrazing almost exterminated it in some areas. It occurs on the eastern areas of the country from the Eastern Cape northwards into KwaZulu-Natal, Swaziland, Mpumalanga and the Northern Province in rocky areas of dry succulent karoo scrub, thicket and bushveld. It also occurs in dry hot river valleys of the eastern Transvaal, through Swaziland and north into Mozambique an uncertain distance. The Spekboom River, in the Lydenburg district, is named for the plant and not vice versa. When was the plant first discovered by Europeans and given its common names? When was it first brought to Europe and North America?
It is not known what the nearest fossil relative was. It is not known if there have been any botanical
"cousins" which have become extinct contemporary to neighboring indigenous human populations. It is not
known what the largest pre-historical dispersion of P. afra was. It is not known what any of the
local myths are regarding the origin of this plant. (The truly native human population of the area
is a Stone-Age culture dating back some 20,000 years.)
It is not known how old the current most senior specimen of this plant is or where that is located. A
photo from early 2011 shows Jim Smith trimming a specimen that is alleged to be 300 years old, per a caption
from its Facebook circulation. In truth, "[I]t started its training [emphasis added] in 1978 when
it was collected from an urban garden in Vero Beach, FL. At that time the trunk was only about 2"
wide." Thus, the tree was in training for 32 years. |
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HISTORICAL REFERENCES P. afra has a long garden history in South Africa, and was introduced into Dutch and English gardens more than two centuries ago. (The Dutch founded Cape Town at Table Bay on the southwestern tip of the continent in 1652. The first large-scale British settlement was established in 1820 some 900 km away to the northeast and 40 km inland in the eastern coastal region at a place which was the garrison of Fort Graham and would be eventually called Grahamstown. Less than 50 km to the southwest of that site is the aforementioned Addo bush.)
1812 - 23 March, Five miles from Cold Station, possibly at about Suurplaas, 54 km north northwest of Graaff-Reinet:
1816 - 2 April, Bethelsdorp:
1823 - "PORTULACA'RIA (Bot.) a genus of plants, Class 5 Pentandria, Order 3 Trigynia.
1829 - Grahamstown to the Kap River:
1834 - "The spekboom, with its light green leaves and lilac blossoms." (vi. 209)
1836 - August, "The village [in Graaff-Reinet] is sheltered on each side by high conical mountains decorated with perpetual
verdure which is derived from the abundance of spek-boom [Portulacaria afra] that covers the rocky
declivities." (pg. 18)
1838 - 27 March: "I observed these aloes again today in great abundance in the Bush country near the Gauritz
River... Here, a traveller proceeding eastward first meets with many of the singular forms of vegetation which
characterize that province, such as the succulent, leafless, thorny Euphorbia,, the spekboom
Portulacaira afra which is the favourite food of the elephant, the boerboontjes, Schotia speciosa
[Schotia afra], a leguminous shrub with beautiful scarlet flowers growing in clusters out of the old wood, the
noojeboom [nooieboom], Cussonia spicata a small tree of very singular appearance..." (pg. 101)
1838 - 25 October, From Roodebergen [23 km southeast of Ladismith] to the Swartberge en route to Zoar:
1841 - "But there was on the hills a considerable quantity of spek-boom, (i.e. fat-tree,) a shrub with succulent
leaves, slightly acid, which supply both food and moisture to the horned cattle." (pg.
24)
1843 - "...The next day (March 27) I observed these plants [Aloes] in great abundance in the Bush country near
the Gauritz river. This was a sort of country quite new to me, and might be considered as a foretaste of
what we afterwards saw on an immensely larger scale in the eastern province. Here, in fact, a traveller
proceeding eastward first meets with many of the singular forms of vegetation which characterize that province;
such as the succulent, leafless, thorny Euphorbias, the Spekboom [Portulacaria afra], the
Boerboontjes [Schottia speciosa], the Najeboom [Cussonia spicata], of which I shall
afterwards have occasion to speak more fully. Many of these forms do not occur again till we cross the
Camtoos. The wild rough shrubbery of these plants, which forms a belt of some miles in width on both sides
of the Gauritz, is much less dense than the eastern Bush; the soil appeared to be a crumbled shale or
slaty clay..." (pg. 23)
1843 - "One of the most valuable shrubs...is the spek-boom (portulacaria afra). It is found in great
abundance on the stony ridges and affords excellent food for those large flocks of sheep, and especially of
goats... In severe droughts this bush is truly invaluable."
1844 - "Before reaching the Roodeberg [Hoek Fontein, Red-mountain-corner Fountain], which is Red Sandstone,
enclosing boulders, a man who had accompanied us from our lodging-place, left us: he took another of the many roads
which cross this desert country in various directions, to farms situated wherever a little water / is to be found. --
Between this place and the foot of the Zwartebergen, Black Mountains, we came at no water, and the day was
intensely hot; but on the hills there was a considerable quantity of Portulacaria afra, or Spek-boom,
Fat-tree, a shrub with succulent leaves that are slightly acid, which supply both food and moisture to the
horned cattle." (pp.
113-114)
1850 - "One vast jungle of dwarfish evergreen shrubs and bushes, amongst which the speckboom was predominant." (12/1)
1852 - "The eastern zone [of the cone-shaped mass of land which constitutes the promontory of the Cape] is often
furnished with mountains, well wooded with evergreen succulent trees, on which neither fire nor droughts can have
the smallest effect ('Strelitzia', 'Zamia horrida', 'Portulacaria afra', 'Schotia speciosa', 'Euphorbias', and
'Aloes arborescens'); and its seaboard gorges are clad with gigantic timber." (Chapter 5)
1877 - "The Portulacaria Afra is the 'Spekboom' of the Cape of Good Hope, said to be the favourite food of the
elephant. It is one of the numerous forms which confer a peculiar physiognomy on the vegetation of the
Colony: --
1877 - "The hills are clothed with spekboom and other nourishing trees and shrubs." (pg.
479)
1878/9 - "C'est le pays des Mesembrianthemum, des Crassulacées, Stapéliées,
Aloïnées, Euphorbiacées ; on y trouve aussi des Composées, Asclépiadées,
Apocynées; un Ipomoea pourvu d'une immense tige souterraine subéreuse, et la Portulacaria
afra ou Spek-boom, buisson étrange à feuilles charnues et acides."
1879 - "The spek-boom, from which the river takes its name, grows here in great profusion." (pg.
186).
1880 - "Portulacaria Afra, Jacquin.
1891 - "The spekboom, which is a good-sized shrub, sometimes attaining the
height of fifteen or twenty feet, grows plentifully a little way up the mountains;
and in very protracted droughts, when the karroo and other bush of the plains begin
at last to fail, it is our great resource for the ostriches, which then ascend for
the purpose of feeding on it; and though they do not care for it as they do for their
usual kinds of food, it is good and nourishing for them. Elephants are very fond of
the spekboom, but though a few of these animals are still found near Port
Elizabeth, there are fortunately none in our neighbourhood to make inroads on the
supplies reserved for the ostriches against what certainly in South Africa cannot be
called "a rainy day." The spekboom has a large soft stem, very thick, round,
succulent leaves, and its clusters of star-shaped, wax-like flowers are white, sometimes
slightly tinged with pink." (pg.
51)
1893 - "...The gaunt leafless Euphorbia; the Aloe, with its spear-like leaves and tall scarlet spikes; the spiny
palm-like Zamia; the Spekboom, with its pale green foliage and bright blossoms; the elephant's foot, the
Strilitzia, the ivy-geranium, the Plumbago, and numerous other shrubs and flowering plants, make their appearance,
whose strange and peculiar forms at once strike the eye..." (pg.
18).
1893 - "As we got lower down the valley, there were masses of spekboom (Portulacaria afra) with thick swollen
stems and branches (like gutta-percha tubing badly put together), covered with small green fleshy leaves and tiny
pink flowers. It is the pet food of elephants..."
1895 - "The Cape Gardens have hitherto had little to do with the introduction and distribution of economic plants
or the dissemination of information respecting such subjects for the use of the general community. What has
been attempted in this direction was owing entirely to the personal efforts of the curators. The following
extract from Professor MacOwan's Report for 1883, pp. 3-4, shows how much more might have been accomplished
if the funds at his command had allowed:
1896 - "Spek-boom, Portulacaria afra, Jacq., is a fleshy, rounded-leaved, scrubby, soft-wooded tree or bush,
which is recognised as a very valuable food plant for sheep, cattle, and even horses. Successful efforts
have been made to grow it in Namaqualand from cuttings. As these are liable to rot when put in green and
newly severed, they should be spread out for a fortnight to allow the wounds to dry. Where animals are well
fed and pampered, they sometimes lose taste for this excellent natural food. In the neighbourhood of
Oudtshoorn, on a farm where, in the spring of 1895,
ostriches were dying in hundreds, clumps of spek-boom were within easy reach, but the birds would not touch it,
having been accustomed to feed on lucerne. Nevertheless, when birds are brought up to eat it they thrive
well, and seem fond of it. The spek-boom is a bush which recovers rapidly from the injury done by too close
browsing by stock, if a season's respite be granted to it. When spek-boom and the Mesembrianthemum
floribundum are present, stock care but little about their daily visits to the water-vlei." (pg.
88)
1899 - (following the scientific description is this:) "Drawn and described from specimens in flower
on Berea [a ridge above the
northwest side of Durban], October, 1898.
(Plate 78 from pg. 239, drawn by Walter Haygarth, "a Natal born colonist,"
Wood, J. Medley, A.L.S. and Evans, Maurice S., M.L.A., F.Z.S. Natal Plants, Vol. 1 (Durban: Bennett
& Davis; text on pp. 163-164.)
reproduced here smaller than size in book.)
1902 - "I should be obliged if you can furnish me with the following information:-- G. L. PEACOCK. "Lemoenkloof, Dordrecht.""Spekboom will be found growing in most parts of the midlands of the Eastern Province. Any of the intelligent farmers know the shrub and would provide branches for cuttings. It may be grown anywhere Eastaway, and can be propagated by cuttings. This plant requires no artificial irrigation water. "I know nothing of the grass mentioned." E. P. Under "Queries and Replies," pg. 737, The Agricultural Journal (Department of Agricultural Cape of Good Hope; Townshend, Taylor & Snashall, Printers, &c.); Vol. XX, No. 13, June 19.
1902 - "I have before me papers showing the desire of Australians to get help by the introduction of some of our best
stock-feeding, drought-resisting native plants, and surely, for helping in a drought-tried land, they could hardly
apply to a better country than South Africa ; one that, for countless ages, has had the grand work of evolution
trying all forms severely, so that the fact of survival points at once to the adapted value of our native Karroo
flora. Mr. J. H. Maiden, Government Botanist at Sydney, advocates the introduction of spekboom.
Curiously enough, the information sent him by our Conservator of Forests, has these words:--' Spekboom is the
universal name in South africa, not the Boer name, as you put it.' Then it is said by Mr. Maiden: ' The natural
home of the spekboom is in the Karroo;' and he is told by Mr. Hutchins in return: ' I do not think it grows in the
Karroo.' That spekboom is native to the Karroo is well known to all who know anything about it. The earlier
occupiers of Karroo were Dutch, and the fact that they gave the name to the bush, when they first met with it in the
Karroo, is of itself good proof that the spekboom is native to the Karroo; and colonists after them have very
naturally called the plant by the name given to it by the Dutch pioneers. Spekboom is widely distributed over
the Karroo, not so much on the flats as on the rands or hills--rugged, stony crests showing up everywhere about the
so-called Karroo plains--crests that often carry special plants, because the intruded dykes below cause them to give
soil different to much of the flats around them.
1907 - "The surrounding pastoral country is usually covered with good grazing grass, and the edible bush, the
native spekboom, is frequently met with in the kloofs." (Under "Queenstown", pg.
209)
1908 - "...in the primary cortex of Portulacaria afra, Jacq. [leaves], the green cells form a network
between the large, colourless cells." pg.
111).
1913 - "
Portulacaria afra (the spekboom) grows socially in the southeastern Karoo, extending right through to
Kingwilliamstown; it is also reported from the
Eastern Transvaal. It often covers whole hills or mountain slopes with its fresh verdure, which forms a
pleasant contrast to the surrounding dull coloured vegetation. In the Addobush it is arborescent, up to 20
feet high, often forming dense thickets. The juicy leaves are a wholesome food for all classes of stock as
well as for wild animals including buffaloes and elephants; hence farms with plenty of spekboom need not fear an
ordinary drought. 'Providence meant to spoil our farmers in placing the spekboom on the hills of the Karoo,'
wrote MacOwan in one of his articles on the fodder plants of the country."
1922 - "
When the writer was in Cape Town in 1902, Prof. MacOwan called to his attention the spekboom, an important
fodder tree of the karoo, and one of the trees then standing in the gardens was cut down and sent in as
cuttings. As a result several trees of this species are now growing in Santa Barbara and San Diego,
Calif. If it can be naturalized in this portion of California and become wild, as in South Africa, it
will add a valuable forage asset to the hillsides of that region. Dr. Shantz has sent in additional
material with most interesting data on this important tree (Portulacaria afra, No. 48510)."
Plate II (between pp. 10 and 11 of the main text) is captioned "A DENSE THICKET OF SPEKBOOM, IN THE ADDO BUSH,
CAPE PROVINCE. (PORTULACARIA AFRA JACQ., S. P. I. No. 48510.) 'One of the most prominent plants of the
addo bush, the habitat of the only herd of wild elephants in South Africa, this plant supplies the larger part
of their forage. It is relished also by cattle, sheep, and ostriches, and even children enjoy eating the
leaves. It may prove adapted to the coast region of southern California, where it is now growing in
gardens, and possibly will take the place of the worthless [sic] chaparral.'
(Shantz.) (Photographed by Dr. H. L. Shantz, Kenkelbosch, Cape Province, September 7, 1919;
P36202FS.)" "48510. PORTULACARIA AFRA Jacq. Portulacaceæ. Spekboom. From Johannesburg, Transvaal. Cuttings collected by Dr. H. L. Shantz, Agricultural Explorer of the Bureau of Plant Industry. Received November 26, 1919. '(No. 122. Pretoria, Transvaal. October 8, 1919.) Plant from the Botanic Grounds.' (Shantz.) A succulent South African shrub, rising to 12 feet, which affords locally the principal food for elephants; it is excellent for sheep pasture; hence, it may deserve naturalization on stony ridges and in sandy desert land not other-wise readily-utilized. It is stated that all kinds of pasture animals eat it readily and, when grass is scarce, live on it almost entirely. It grows on hot rocky slopes and prefers doleritic soil. It is easily grown from cuttings and even from single leaves. Spekboom displays an extraordinary recuperative power when broken by browsing animals or when injured from other causes. The trunk may attain 1 foot in diameter. (Adapted from Mueller, Select Extra-Tropical Plants, p. 420.) In some places the spekboom is arborescent, up to 20 feet high, often forming dense thickets. The juicy leaves are a wholesome food for all classes of stock as well as for wild animals, including buffaloes and elephants; hence, farms with plenty of spekboom need not fear an ordinary drought. "Providence meant to spoil our farmers in placing the spekboom on the hills of the karoo," wrote MacOwan in one of his articles on the fodder plants of the country. (Adapted from Marloth, The Flora of South Africa, vol. 1, p. 209.) [see above 1913 reference] "The yearly rainfall of the region in which the spekboom thrives averages about 18-3/4 inches, and the rainiest months are the hottest ones (November, December, and January) the temperature reaching 108° F. During these months the rainfall is about 2 inches. In the winter months the rainfall is between 0.35 and 0.54 of an inch and the temperature sometimes as low as 21° F. The plant has been successfully introduced into America and small trees of it are now growing in San Diego and Santa Barbara, Calif." (David Fairchild.) For previous introduction, see S. P. I. Nos. 9604 and 12020." Ibid., pp. 17-18.
1930 - "At Santa Cruz de Teneriffe for Christmas, 1925, and at Hotel Benitez for dinner. Mr. Fairchild observed
that all the hedges, and there were many of them, were of the Spekboom of South africa. Portulacaria Afra
being a good food for elephants Mr. MacOwen asked Mr. Fairchild when he began sending seeds and plants to
America where would he get the elephants to eat it? It was expected that the goats on the Canary Islands
would relish it; at this time they had not begun to browse upon it."
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