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Pavetta edentula

Sond.

Large-leaved bride's bush

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(c) Linda Loffler, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Linda Loffler

iNaturalist· cc-by-nc

(c) berthapi2, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by berthapi2

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no rights reserved, uploaded by Andrew Deacon

Description

A shrub or small tree. It grows 5 m tall. The main stem usually branches low down. The bark is dark grey and rough and cracked. The leaves are opposite and often in clusters near the ends of branches. They are narrowly oval and 25 cm long by 8 cm wide. They are leathery and shiny green. There are nodules scattered over the leaf. The flowers are white and in large clusters in the axils of leaves. The fruit are in branched clusters and 5-7 mm across. The are round and black.

Edible Uses

The leaves are eaten as a snack and vegetable, and the fruit are also edible.

Traditional Uses

The leaves are eaten as a snack and a vegetable.

This uses section is brief — help expand it

Distribution

It is a tropical plant. It grows on rocky hillsides and wooded grassland.

Where It Grows

Africa, Eswatini, Mozambique, South Africa, Southern Africa, Swaziland,

Cultivation

A plant of the moist subtropical zone in eastern Africa, just moving into the tropical areas of Mozambique. Many Pavetta species, including this one, produce leaves with bacterial nodes - these bacteria live in symbiosis with the plant and pass into any seeds that are produced, thus seedlings are already inocculated with the bacteria. It is not certain what function the bacteria play, theories include nitrogen-fixation, growth-regulation and making the leaves poisonous to livestock.

Also Known As

Sawoti, Samunyane, Simunyane

References (4)

  • Fox, F. W. & Young, M. E. N., 1982, Food from the Veld. Delta Books. p 324
  • Long, C., 2005, Swaziland's Flora - siSwati names and Uses http://www.sntc.org.sz/flora/
  • Ruiters-Welcome, A. K., 2019, Food plants of southern Africa. Ph.D. thesis. Univ. of Johannesburg p 97
  • Welcome, A. K. & Van Wyk, B.-E., 2019, An inventory and analysis of the food plants of southern Africa. South African Journal of Botany 122 (2019) 136–179

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