The Story
of
the
Pondoland Ghostbush
RASPALIA TRIGYNA
THE GHOST OF
THE PONDOLAND CENTRE
This elusive plant with the scientific name of Raspalia trigyna was named for a
Professor of Botany in Paris, F. V. Raspail. It was
originally described as Berardia,
another genus in the family Bruniaceae. This family is nearly endemic to the Cape
confined to the winter rainfall region – but with this one exception in the
summer rainfall area.
Around the turn of the
century, this attractive shrub was mentioned by Thomas R. Sim
in the 1900 “Agricultural Journal of the Cape of Good Hope”
16:21-42, 104-114. He states that it was “abundant along streams above the
(Magwa) falls”. Later on, he records it in his “Forests and Forest Flora of the
Cape Colony”
published in 1906. It was only known from the Mzikaba Formation, a sandstone outcropping with which the Pondoland Centre of
Plant Endemism (PC) (Van Wyk 1994) is congruent. This is a very small centre of
180 000 hectares located across the provincial boundary between the Eastern
Cape (formerly known as the Transkei)
and KwaZulu-Natal and lies along
the coastline stretching no more than 15 or so kilometres inland with a maximum
altitude of about 400 to 500 metres.
It was known earlier from only four collections:
Dr. Sutherland, the Surveyor-General of Natal, collected one but gave no
locality; another was found at Murchison near Port Shepstone by the renowned
curator of Durban Botanic Garden, John Medley Wood; one was found at Mkweni River by William Tyson when teaching in Kokstad and
the fourth was that mentioned above, by T. R. Sim.
All these records are from the late 1800s or early 1900s. This gave a total
distribution of about 80 km. Since that time, it lapsed into obscurity.
In 1962, the well-known
amateur botanist and conservationist, Mr. Hugh Nicholson retired to St.
Michael’s-on-sea on the KwaZulu-Natal
south coast. His retirement interests included the creation of an arboretum on
the grounds around his home “Skyline” and the exploration of the vegetation of
the surrounding area. One of his early Thursday botanical walks took him to the
Umtamvuna Nature Reserve (UNR) and there he found, to his surprise, a single
unidentifiable plant growing on a stream bank. It was a shrub standing about a
metre and half high and covered with a mass of tiny white flowers. This was
sent off to Mr. R G Strey at the Natal Herbarium who identified it as the
elusive Pondoland ghostbush. It was in good health growing in very moist
conditions on the bank of a small stream where fire was unlikely to invade with
any force. With its identification, the strange history was revealed and since
then, Mr. Nicholson always encouraged his group of enthusiasts to keep watch
for another specimen. The mass of tiny white flowers which makes the plant
stand out and so easy to spot but when it is not flower it becomes one of those
obscure small fine leaved plants which grow along the sandstone streams.
The UNR plant was
apparently the sole surviving known specimen of this species and in the ‘80s,
it started to fail. It declined from a healthy one and a half metre shrub to a
single remaining 30 cm shoot and finally in 1987, it was clear that it was
beyond recovery. Dr Hannes de Lange of the Endangered Plant Laboratory at
Kirstenbosch came up to collect material to try and propagate but the amount he
dared remove from the ailing plant was so tiny that all attempts at propagation
had failed. In November 1987 our Umtamvuna plant finally gave up the ghost and
the species, so far as was known, was thought to be extinct.
Prof. Braam Van Wyk of the Department of
Botany of Pretoria University
is the authority on the Pondoland Centre of Plant Endemism which arose from his
research over the years and resulted in the publication of a number of new
species. The PC is well known for its suite of endemic woody plants as well as
grassland endemics. In July of 1988, Braam had just completed the publication
of his Field Guide to the Flowers of Witswatersrand and Pretoria
and he was ripe for an excursion. It was clear that we had to undertake a field
trip to try and find another plant or plants to perpetuate the species.
A group was made up of
interested and knowledgeable people and we set of on this search to the Transkei.
This extensive exploration covered the coastal area starting from Mazeppa Bay
in the south looking into every stream we came across as we headed north. To
everyone’s great pleasure
and excitement, our search was eventually successful with discovery of a fine
two metre specimen by one of us (Trevor Streever)
near Magwa Falls.
Nevertheless, it was still only a single specimen. Therefore, in one year it
had changed from a KwaZulu-Natal
endemic known from a single specimen to and Eastern Cape
one. Our floral “rhino” had charged back to life but with an even more tenuous
hold on life than the rhino.
An urgent message was
sent to Dr. Hannes de Lange of the Kirstenbosch Endangered Plant Laboratory. He
came and collected cuttings from the plant and after much trial and error such
as attempts to graft cuttings onto other Cape species of
Raspalia, sufficient cuttings
took successfully and plants were raised which allowed the establishment of
small populations in both the U N R and the Mkambati Game Reserve. Naturally,
all these plants were clones of the Magwa plant. The Magwa plant survived for
some years before it too faded and died in 1995 leaving us with the belief that
the species might well be extinct in the wild.
So
matters remained for some years with all of us on the lookout for other plants.
At last, on one of Mr. Nicholson’s regular Thursday walks on the Western
Heights in August 1995, while the
rest of the group relaxed after lunch, one of his apprentices, Jo Arkell, wandered off and returned with a branchlet. This
was presented to “Mr. Nic” who, after some consideration, was happy to declare
it Raspalia trigyna. This exciting find was located
down a stream about 20 metres off the normal path which “Mr. Nic” had walked
over the years! Once more Dr de Lange came up from Kirstenbosch to take further
cuttings and to assess the possibilities for cross-pollination. He examined the
flowers under the microscope and found that them to be self-incompatible but
the globe on his microscope blew before checking the cross pollination
potential but he felt that the chances of crossing between the new plant and
the clones were not good. He cross-pollinated both ways between the two groups
of plants but subsequently we never found any seed.
Years went by before
another excitement occurred with the discovery of a plant in Mkambati Nature
Reserve by manager, Dirk Prinsloo, a plant enthusiast, in May 1999. This small
plant was wedged into some rocks in the bed of a stream and its broken look
testifies to its struggles to survive the yearly floodwaters. As with all the plants seen, it was in a position where fire would
be unlikely to penetrate.
The latest stage of the history of this
unusual plant came in May 2001 when Simon Woodley, a keen indigenous plant
nurseryman, together with a friend, Matt Williams, found a tiny population
south of the Msikaba River.
With great excitement, on closer inspection, it proved to be a functioning
breeding population. This remarkable discovery seems to underline the
vulnerability of the species as the site is a mere 20 metres long by 2 metres up
a stream bank. It is on a steep bank facing south west situated at the base of
a wetland giving year round cool moist conditions. Many of the plants in the PC
which have an affinity with the Cape winter rainfall
region survive on these cooler slopes. The population consists of 12 larger
plants up to 1.2 metres tall with around a dozen smaller ones but the important
point was the presence of a good number of seedlings of different sizes. The
preferred habitat for the seedlings is under the overhanging bank is cool shady
conditions. The locality of this remarkable colony is not available to the
public.
A very small seedling was
sent immediately to Braam van Wyk who confirmed that it was definitely a Raspalia
trigyna. Seed was collected from the plants and this proved to be fertile.
The recovery plan for Raspalia trigyna allows Simon Woodley of
Indigiflora Nursery to propagate the plant with the long-term objective of
establishing more populations in the wild and making plants available for
gardeners. The first seedlings will be planted to create ex-situ breeding
colonies to ensure availability of seed stocks as the breeding colony is not
protected or conserved in anyway. One will be in the UNR and the other at
Mkambati Nature Reserve.
Perhaps, one day you may so lucky as to have a Raspalia trigyna growing in
your garden!
Tony
Abbott December 2003