Pittosporum viridiflorum

    Botanical name

    Pittosporum viridiflorum

    Other names

    Cheesewood; kasuur (Afrikaans); umkhwenkwe (Xhosa); umfusamvu (Zulu)

     

    Pittosporaceae

    Dimensions

    Well-shaped, single-stemmed and erect tree often up to 7m, occasionally in forests up to 15m

    Description of stem

    The bark is smooth and grey in younger trees, becoming rough, darker and sometimes fluted in mature specimens, with distinctive horizontal rings of lenticels

    Description of leaves

    Simple leaves arranged in spiralling clusters at twig ends; obovate and wavy, glossy green above, characteristic network of veining more conspicuous on the lower surface; margin entire, apex varying, often attenuate

    Description of flowers

    Dense terminal clusters of small creamish yellow flowers with five attractively recurving petals

    Description of seed/fruit

    Yellow to light brown dehiscent capsules, 6cm in diameter, containing four shiny red seeds in winter

    Description of roots

    Not aggressive, suitable for smaller gardens

    Variation

     

    Propagation and cultivation

    Grows readily from seed or cuttings in well-drained soil; water regularly

    Tolerances

     

    Uses

    Popular and succesfully used as a garden tree; the bark is said to possess medicinal properties, among other things for the treatment of stomach disorders; also used in the treatment of cattle

    Ecological rarity

    Common, may even be invasive in some habitats

    Pests and diseases

     

    Other

     

    Location

    Wide-ranging forest and bushveld conditions

    Distribution

    Western and Eastern Cape, Kwazulu-Natal, Free State, Gauteng, North West, Mpumalana and Limpopo

    Country

    South Africa, Lesotho, Swaziland, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Malawi, Zambia, Tanzania, Kenya, Madagascar, Ethiopia, India