Borassus aethiopum Mart. (Arecaceae) in Limpopo province with a key to South African palms
Abstract
Background: Borassus aethiopum Mart. commonly occurs in many parts of tropical Africa, and
in South Africa it is restricted to the Leydsdorp region where it is conspicuous along the Selati
River. The species is sometimes considered to have been introduced to South Africa because of
its disjunct distribution. It has remained poorly studied and little is known about the local
populations of this palm.
Objectives: This study provides a descriptive treatment and documents the population
structure of B. aethiopum in this area, and presents a key to the six indigenous palm species of
South Africa.
Method: All accessible populations were surveyed and documented, and eight transects were
randomly placed to gather data on size-class distributions. Borassus aethiopum and other
indigenous palm species were compared morphologically.
Results: The population structure analyses of B. aethiopum revealed a monotonic decline, but
the permutation index suggested that the species is prone to recruitment events. This is
supported by patches that are dominated by specific height classes. Leaf shape and size, fruit
size and geographical distribution were the diagnostic characters most useful to recognise the
species of South African indigenous palms.
Conclusion: Borassus aethiopum is distinguishable from other South African palms based on
stem, leaf and fruit characters. It is considered as indigenous to Granite Lowveld as the palm
is part of the natural vegetation and is characterised by a size-class distribution reflecting a
stable population
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/34529https://journals.abcjournal.aosis.co.za/index.php/abc/article/view/2374/2602
https://doi.org/10.4102/abc.v49i1.2374