South African Cabbage Trees tolerating centuries of drought in Australian botanic gardens
I'm sure I'd noticed before the Cabbage Tree (Cussonia) outside my old office at the Royal
Botanic Garden in Sydney, but it was a pleasant surprise to (re)discover it on
my visit there a week or so ago. I was even more pleased to discover first one
in the yard of the lodge I'm staying in temporarily at Melbourne's Royal
Botanic Gardens and then another rather larger one well within the botanic
gardens.
The species of Cabbage Tree in
Sydney is labelled Cussonia paniculata,
the one in Melbourne Cussonia
spicata. Returning from a walk to the far side of the botanic garden
tonight I found another specimen, this time with the same species name as the one I saw in
Sydney.
Here are some more pictures of Cussonia paniculata from Sydney, including one of a flower and perhaps the only pollinator that could love such a flower.
This is the one in Melbourne next to a casually addressed Director on holidays:
So what are these strange and arresting plants? They are in the family Araliaceae - along with ivy and various of the things called Umbrella Trees - and there are about 25 different species. It's their chunkiness and large umbrella-like leaves that make them stand out from the botanical crowd.
The Melbourne specimen of Cussonia paniculata seems to have differently incised leaves to the one in Sydney – they are more what I would call ‘pinnate’, like many ferns. The Sydney one, from memory and my pictures, had fewer segments with saw-shaped edges.
This may be seasonal or age-of-plant variation but my favourite website for African plants, Plantzafrica, mentions two varieties of Cussonia paniculata: the more commonly grown variety sinuata having deeply lobed leaves. I don’t have access at the moment to any technical literature to check this, or indeed to check if the species identifications are correct in the first place.
Adding to this uncertainty, the plant labelled Cussonia spicata here in Melbourne looks very like the Cussonia paniculata from Sydney. These are pictures of two different specimens in Melbourne, but both clearly the same species. Down here, we seem to call it Cussonia spicata.
Native to tropical and southern Africa, and nearby islands, Cussonia species don’t mind dry conditions so it suits the planting
ethos of most botanic gardens around Australia today.
In fact this has been the ethos of the Melbourne botanic gardens right
back to its first curators John Arthur and John Dallachy (1846 to 1857), and first directors
Ferdinand Mueller and William Guilfoyle (1857-1909). They all tested the Australian flora
to find drought-tolerant gardens plants: Mueller, for example, trialled Blue
Gum (Eucalyptus globulus) avenues when the botanic gardens was
under his control.
Exotic succulents and other South African plants were early
introductions into Melbourne. The largest Cussonia
in the Melbourne botanic gardens looks like it might have been a Mueller or
Guilfoyle planting. Or indeed both: Guilfoyle famously moved lots of Mueller’s trees
to new locations.
I have no doubt there are more of these two Cussonia species in both botanic gardens, and other species, but it's always nice to (re)discover something as distinctive and odd as these South African trees. It might also be nice one day to confirm their identities and get Sydney and Melbourne in sync. Or maybe its just that I'm adjusting to the Australian summer and not taking in the subtle details of the plants yet.
Comments
The tree can loose all leaves prior to he flowering.
I see with my example that flowering takes two years to complete.
My observations
Stage 1 the tree grows the flower head trunks,This is the stage were main leaves start dropping,
Stage 2 The tree re sprouts new branches with fast new leave growth.
Stage 3 The flower head trunks now produce flower stems ,flower and then seed.
here's a link to a Zim site http://www.zimbabweflora.co.zw/speciesdata/species.php?species_id=142930
and another from SANBI http://pza.sanbi.org/cussonia-paniculata
I have 3 plants purchased as paniculata and would love to know, what I really have in my pots. One seems to be a paniculata. The other two are very small and I am hedging my bets. They were all purchased as paniculatas.
What are your thoughts?
There are also, apparently, the two subspecies of paniculata, as outlined here: http://www.plantzafrica.com/plantcd/cussoniapan.htm. You might be able to get more information about the two species by comparing this page with the one on spicata (http://www.plantzafrica.com/plantcd/cussonspic.htm) I like the Plants of Africa site and it seems to be very reliable.
Sorry I can't help more. Best wishes, Tim
Thank you so much for your response. I've only just stumbled upon it just now. I can now see that all three of my plants are
C. paniculatas. The plant outside has distinctive silvery foliage, the smaller ones indoors are much darker, but same shape foliage.
I obtained 2 plants at collector's corner Gardenworld and the one outside at Yamina Collectors nursery with compound lobed leaves like the subsp. sinuata here http://maree-clarkson.blogspot.com.au/2014/03/kiepersol-cabbage-tree-cussonia.html I have since obtained a C spicata from Roraima nursery, and it has the same foliage structure as the trees in the botanical garden, the individual leaflets being segmented again. But they don't look like the spicata in the above article. (My spicata has sappy green foliage and it needs to be moved into shade, as they are lightening rapidly in full sun.)
These are just my observations based on the labels attached to the plants I purchased and the specimens seen in the botanical garden. Until someone has a closer look at all the anatomical features we will most likely not be any wiser. Hopefully mine will flower at some time in the future.
Happy Holidays,
Sabine
Thank you for a very interesting page. I'm about to plant one in my garden in the Blue Mountains, so hopefully it will cope.
Regards,
Andrew Orme
Ann from East Gippsland