Celtis sinensis Pers. (Ulmaceae) naturalised in northern South Africa and keys to distinguish between Celtis species commonly cultivated in urban environments

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Date
2018Author
Siebert, Stefan J.
Struwig, Madeleen
Knoetze, Leandra
Komape, Dennis M.
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Background: Alien Celtis species are commonly cultivated in South Africa. They are easily
confused with indigenous C. africana Burm.f. and are often erroneously traded as such. Celtis
australis L. is a declared alien invasive tree. Celtis sinensis Pers. is not, but has become
conspicuous in urban open spaces.
Objectives: This study investigates the extent to which C. sinensis has become naturalised,
constructs keys to distinguish between indigenous and cultivated Celtis species, and provides
a descriptive treatment of C. sinensis.
Methods: Land-cover types colonised by C. sinensis were randomly sampled with 16 belt
transects. Woody species were identified, counted and height measured to determine the
population structure. C. africana and the three alien Celtis species were cultivated for 2 years
and compared morphologically.
Results: Celtis sinensis, Ligustrum lucidum and Melia azedarach were found to be alien species,
most abundant in urban areas. The population structure of C. sinensis corresponds to that of
the declared invasive alien, M. azedarach. Although C. africana occurs naturally, it is not
regularly cultivated. This is ascribed to erroneous plantings because of its resemblance to
juvenile plants of C. sinensis. Keys are provided to identify Celtis species based on leaf shape
and margin, and drupe characters.
Conclusion: Celtis sinensis is naturalised in central South Africa, especially in urban open
spaces and beginning to colonise natural areas. It is flagged as a species with invasive potential.
Characteristics of the leaves and fruits allow for accurate identification of indigenous and alien
Celtis species, both as juvenile or adult trees
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/30738https://doi.org/10.4102/abc.v48i1.2288
https://abcjournal.org/index.php/abc/article/view/2288