Description
Encephalartos ferox is not usually regarded
as having much of an exposed trunk, although it is certainly
possible to find specimens in the wild with stems of up to 2m
above ground level. Branching of the trunk is uncommon and
usually occurs only when the growing apex becomes physically
damaged. In mature plants the trunk reaches 25cm to 35cm in
diameter.
Leaves of this species are 1m to
2m long and usually straight, although sometimes a slight kink
in the rachis is seen.
The dark green pinnae, somewhat
holly-like in appearance, occur as more or less opposite pairs,
set along the rachis to make a slight V-angle and diminish in
size to a series of prickles toward the leaf base. Median
leaflets are typically flat or only slightly ruffled, 15cm long
and up to 5cm broad. In some plants the leaflet margins are
quite markedly rolled under to give a tubular appearance. An
extreme of this leaflet type is seen in some of the specimens at
Fairchild Tropical Garden, which are said to be derived from
Natal seed. The leaflets have 2 to 4 small teeth on each margin
and 3 to 5 spiny lobes at the apex.
E. ferox usually bears 1-3 cones
but on older specimens as many as 5 or 10 cones are borne by
female or male plants respectively. The cones are usually a
brilliant scarlet colour, occasionally tending to pink shades
and golden-yellow cones have been seen in plants in the Sileze
area and from certain Mozambique localities. Male cones are
sub-cylindric, 40cm to 50cm long and 7cm to 10cm in diameter.
Female cones are more ovoid, 25cm to 50cm long and 20cm to 40cm
in diameter. Cone scales are somewhat wrinkled and end in a
pronounced beak. Each female cone bears about 500 seeds which
have a bright red outer skin (sarcotesta) and are typically
4.5cm to 5cm long and 1.5cm to 2cm in diameter.

Female cone |
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Male cones |
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Seeds |
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Leaf detail |
Distribution & Habitat
The natural habitat of E. ferox
comprises a fairly narrow strip of coastal scrub extending from
Sodwana Bay on the Zululand coast up to a point about 650 km
north of Maputo in Mozambique. It is fairly well established
throughout this area and although the species is not officially
listed as endangered, rare or threatened, numbers have been
reduced due to encroachment of habitation in Mozambique,
afforestation activities in Zululand and the activities of
unscrupulous collectors. In Maputaland (previously Tongaland)
the main four localities are south of Kosi Bay, the shores near
Lake Sibaya, the Sileze area and the Tembe elephant park. In the
coastal zones it is often found associated with the wild banana,
Strelitzia nicolai, while further inland it occurs in wooded
scrub. Apart from its occurrence on the African mainland, the
species is also found on Innaca Island, about 35 km east of
Maputo. The habitat experience typically hot and humid tropical
weather with an annual rainfall, mostly falling in summer, of
1,000mm to 1,250mm. In certain of the grassland areas there are
cyclical fires at about a four year frequency to which the
species seems well adapted. Its occurrence on stabilised sand
dunes is a character, which E. ferox shares with E. arenarius in
the Eastern Cape. However, plants of E. ferox do not grow right
down to the shore itself, the latter quality amongst cycads
apparently being confined to E. hildebrandtii in East Africa.
The furthest inland occurrence of E. ferox is that of a solitary
specimen found by Natal Parks Board officer, I. Steytler, in
1964 on the Makatini Flats about 40 km inland from Sodwana Bay.
This does seem to be somewhat outside the usual narrow coastal
range and Cynthia Giddy speculated that its presence might have
arisen from transport of a seed by the Trumpeter Hornbill which
is common in the area and has been observed swallowing whole
cycad seed, later to regurgitate the kernel.
Cultivation & Propagation
E. ferox grows well in frost-free areas and enjoys
plenty of heat and water, consistent with its conditions in habitat. One of the
fastest growing of all cycads, it can cone within 12 years from the time of seed
germination. Plants prefer shady conditions with well-drained soil and respond
positively to both inorganic and organic fertiliser applications. Whilst this
species will serve well as a container plant, it is used to best advantage as a
landscaping feature plant where its luxuriant foliage contributes dramatically
to a tropical impression. Groupings of several plants compound this effect and
of course increase the possibility of eventual seed production.
Notes
An Italian plant collector, Cavaliere Carlo Antonio
Fornasini, is generally credited with the "discovery" of E. ferox. Fornasini
botanised in and around the Inhambane area in Mozambique from 1839 onwards and
kept up a continuous flow of specimens to his countryman, Professor Giuseppe
Bertolini, who worked in the northern Italian city of Bologna. Bertolini,
himself the son of a well-known botanist, drew and described many of Fornasini's
specimens in a series of dissertations entitled "Illustrazione di Piante
Mozambicesi", which was published in a local scientific journal. Memorie della
Accademia delle Scienze dell Istituto di Bologna". Amongst the specimens sent by
Fornasini were two large cycad leaves from a quite beautiful ("una bella pianta"),
but not very common plant which had stems "as thick as a human torso" and bore
amongst its leaves "several fruits similar to a pineapple ...... but not very
good to eat". Fornasini also remarked that the natives extracted a type of
starch from the stems. Thus on 27 March 1851 Bertolini published a two-page
report on this cycad which he named Encephalartos ferox.
In July 1920 two young botanists, Robert Aitkin, newly-appointed lecturer at
Natal University College, and postgraduate student George Gale, set out on a
arduous trip to the Pondoland (now Maputaland) in northern Natal. From their
subsequent report ...."the means of transport was the only one possible in a
country unoccupied by white settlers, viz. a wagon and a span of sixteen
donkeys. Progress by this means is extremely slow .... it will scarcely be
surprising that a day's journey rarely exceeds twelve miles." But their efforts
were well rewarded when they came across a stand of cycads where (in what seems
to be a somewhat exaggerated report)....."The tallest plant seen was 11 ft. in
height and about 3ft. 6ins. in girth. Plants of 6 to 9 ft. are common".
Specimens were collected and are still preserved in the National Herbarium at
Pretoria. During the same expedition Aitken and Gale also came across the stand
of Raphia palms later named Raphia australis at Kosi Bay. The following year a
Colonel Lugge made a similar trip and his cycad specimen is still on file in the
Natal Herbarium.
During the next ten years or so, a number of people visited the area in which
these plants had been found and brought back plants, many of which were planted
in Durban homes. A Roman Catholic Missionary, Father Jacob Gerstner, collected
plants in the 20's. A Mr. R.H. Rutherfoord of Obotini gathered specimens in
1927. All these people obtained their specimens independently and there was
subsequently a rather curious set of correspondence in the Natal Mercury, in
which each of them claims to have discovered the Kosi Bay cycad. Another story
tells of a Zulu woman wearing a necklace of the red seeds and being seen in
Durban's West Street by a passing botanist who, on questioning the lady, was
told that the seed had come from a plant near Tongaat. In 1930 Sir Arthur Hill
and Dr. J. Hutchinson, distinguished botanists from Kew Gardens, visited Durban
and saw well established plants of this cycad in several local gardens. On
returning to Kew, Hutchinson wrote up a description of the species in the 1932
issue of Kew Bulletin and thus twelve years after its first discovery in Natal,
Encephalartos kosiensis was officially named.
When Hutchinson named E. kosiensis 1932 he was careful to note that this species
was undoubtedly allied to E. ferox. Only about ten years later was the question
raised of just how similar or how different these two taxa were and it was Miss
I.C. Verdoorn who suggested that they might in fact be one and the same species.
The key to the whole episode was Bertolini's original water-colour painting
which his grandson found and sent to Kew. A copy of this painting found its way
to H. Basil Christian, keen cycadologist and founder of the Ewanrigg Gardens
near Harare. Christian immediately wrote to Kew and in a letter dated 5 December
1946, says ..."in my opinion this photograph definitely settles the question.
... Had Hutchinson seen this, it is possible that he may not have described the
Kosi Bay plant as a new species." Since about 1950 the two taxa have been
regarded as synonymous and E. ferox as the earlier of the two names, has
precedence.
E. ferox is fairly well represented in public and private gardens the world
over. According to CITES reports, local nurserymen have shipped plantlets to
Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, U.S.A., Canada, England, France, Holland, Italy,
Germany, Denmark, Switzerland, Japan and the Philippines. Mature plants are
established in many European botanic gardens, including those in Warsaw,
Amsterdam, Hamburg and Munich. Most major American botanic gardens have
specimens with perhaps the finest plants being found at the Fairchild Tropical
Gardens in Florida.
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Short stemmed
Green leaves
Full Sun - Semi-Shade
Medium Water
Frost sensitive
Height: up to 2m |
Distribution
- Sodwana Bay, KZN-
Maputo, Mozambique
- Joubertina
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Eco-types
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Habitat photo 1
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References & Acknowledgements
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Osborne, R. Focus on Encephalartos ferox. Encephalartos. 9
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E.ferox female cone photo Loot Eksteen.
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Other Links
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