Leucosidea sericea

    Botanical name

    Leucosidea sericea

    Other names

    Oldwood; ouhout (Afrikaans); umtshitshi (Zulu)

    Family

    Rosaceae

    Dimensions

    A straggling shrub or a small, evergreen tree of around 4 m in height, occasionally reaching 7 m; multistemmed and may become 5 m wide

    Description of stem

    Brown flaking bark on irregular and gnarled trunks, young branches have hairy stipules remaining on them

    Description of leaves

    Alternate, compound with about four pairs of leaflets as well as a terminal one; dark green on top, lower surface greyish and covered in silky hairs; leaflets obovate; margins serrated, tend to curl inward from the sides; the leaf veins are markedly sunken on the upper surface

    Description of flowers

    Clustered in terminal sprays, five yellow to light-green petals, appearing in spring into summer

    Desciption of seed/fruit

    Clusters of small fruits at the flower base

    Description of roots

     

    Variation

     

    Propagation and cultivation

    Grows from seed or cuttings, hardy and fast-growing

    Tolerances

    Frost resistant

    Uses

    Firewood; a paste from the leaves is said to be used in the treatment of ophthalmia in Kwazulu-Natal; browsed by livestock and game; planted in gardens as hedges and as bonsai

    Ecological rarity

    Common, may invade in areas where soil neglect has occurred

    Pests and diseases

     

    Other

     

    Location

    Occurring on grassy slopes, in bushkloofs and along river banks

    Distribution (SA provinces)

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

    Country

    South Africa, Lesotho, Swaziland, Zimbabwe