Encephalartos longifolius (Jacq.) Lehm.Common NamesBreadpalm, broodboom (1).Taxonomic notesSyn: Zamia longifolia Jacq. (1).DescriptionTrunk often very thick trunk, up to about 3 m high, with a crown of dark or metallic green leaves that are straight, arching, or sometimes recurved towards the tips. Leaflets broad, hairy when young, up to 4 cm wide, lower margins sometimes with a few teeth. One or 2 cones are borne together, brownish-green, among the largest in the genus - up to nearly 60 cm long. The seeds are red (1).RangeSouth Africa: "from the mountains near Uniondale eastwards to the Albany district, in the catchment of the Gamtoos and Sundays Rivers."[It is] are a sight along the old road over the mountain from Ann's Villa to the Zuurberg Inn, boldly outlined against the bare grassy slopes. Several fine trees also grow in the Van Staden's Flower Reserve not far from Port Elizabeth" (1). Remarks"[F]ossil remains of a cycad species, Zamites recta, much resembling it, have been found [within int range]."This was the first cycad seen by the early colonists pushing eastwards. This was Thunberg's breadtree; and this species almost changed the course of South African history for its seeds nearly killed General Smuts and men of a Boer commando in the eastern Cape during the Anglo-Boer War. Colonel Deneys Reitz writes in his book Commando how Smuts and his men, camping on the Suurberg, were poisoned after eating the seeds of Encephalartos altensteinii. Botanists today know that Reitz mistook the species, and that it was Thunberg's breadtree that poisoned the party" (1). Citations(1) Palmer & Pitman 1972.See also Jones 1993. | |
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