Protea comptonii

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Protea comptonii
Protea comptonii
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Proteales
Family: Proteaceae
Genus: Protea
Species:
P. comptonii
Binomial name
Protea comptonii

Protea comptonii, also known as saddleback sugarbush,[2][1][4][5][6] is a smallish tree[5][6] of the genus Protea in the family Proteaceae.[2][4] It is found in South Africa and Eswatini.[2][7]

Other vernacular names which have been recorded to be used for this species in South Africa are Barberton Mountain sugarbush and Barberton sugarbush.[2][1] A name recorded in Eswatini is mountain protea.[8] In the Afrikaans language the names Barberton-suikerbos,[2][6] Barbertonse bergsuikerbos or Compton-se-suikerbos are used.[2] In the siSwati language the name sicalabane has been recorded[7][8] -this name is used for a great many other of the larger proteas.[8] Another name used for the tree in this language is sidlungu,[7][8] although that means 'protea' in general.[8]

Taxonomy

Protea comptonii was first described as a new species by John Stanley Beard in 1958.[3]

Classification

Protea comptonii was classified in Protea section Patentiflorae by Tony Rebelo in 1995, what he calls the "mountain sugarbushes", along with P. angolensis, P. curvata, P. laetans, P. madiensis and P. rubropilosa. The validity of this group is suspect.[5]

Etymology

The specific epithet is an eponym commemorating the South African botanist Robert Harold Compton,[citation needed] who (among other pursuits) spent much of his career working on the flora of Eswatini.[9]

Description

Protea comptonii habitus

This plant is a smallish tree, 4–8 metres (13–26 ft) tall, with a rounded, open crown and a trunk up to 50 centimetres (20 in) in diameter. The thick, corky bark is coloured grey, it forms a layer up to 20 centimetres (7.9 in) thick.[5] It is a long-lived species with a generation length of 50 to 100 years.[2]

The inflorescences are specialised structures called pseudanthia, also known simply as flower heads, containing hundred of reduced flowers, called florets. The flower heads are surrounded by 'involucral bracts'; these bracts are cream-coloured and glabrous. Together with Protea curvata and P. rubropilosa this species has a large receptacle at the base of the flower head which has a dome-shape – this is thought to be a more basal evolutionary characteristic. The style is 65 to 80mm in length.[5]

Distribution

In South Africa this plant occurs in two disjunct populations in the provinces of Mpumalanga (eastern) and KwaZulu-Natal (northern).[2][1][10] The KwaZulu-Natal range is restricted to the hills around the town of Vryheid and the Ithala Game Reserve[2][1] in the eNgotshe region around the town of Louwsburg,[1] but as of 2019 it has become extirpated from the Vryheid hills.[2] The Mpumalanga population spills over into Eswatini, where the tree grows only in the far northwest -this population is found in the hills south of the town of Barberton[1][2][7] and southeast from Kaapsehoop,[1] an old gold rush town -an ancient land with very special ultramafic soil. Protea curvata also occurs here.[citation needed]

In Eswatini this tree is only found near the town of Bulembu (2001)[11][12] and in the Malolotja National Park.[7][11][12]

The present spatial distribution of the species is fragmented into smaller subpopulations, most of these are very small, but historically it was much more common and formed large groves on grassland in the Barberton mountains. The remaining habitat is largely grassland fragments between timber plantations.[2] Where it does still occur it is often the dominant plant, forming almost pure stands.[1]

Ecology

This species is found growing in a limited number of specific habitats: montane grassland around Barberton, and in KwaZulu-Natal it occurs in either sourveld or grassland in the Zululand mistbelt, on quartzite-derived substrates.[2] It is found on steep, south-facing slopes among quartzite outcrops,[2][1] at altitudes of 700 to 1,800 metres.[2]

The tree blooms in the winter in the Barberton mountains.[4] Pollination is achieved by means of visits by nectar-feeding birds. Its aerial stems can survive the wildfires which periodically pass through its habitat and re-sprout.[2]

Its seeds are not stored on the plant as are those of many other proteas, and are released from the infructescence immediately after ripening. The seeds are dispersed by action of the wind.[2] Recruitment appears to occur at a low rate.[1]

Cattle do not feed on the leaves of this tree, or at least leave it alone in the veld, but it is consumed by wild antelope.[2]

Uses

There are no recorded uses known in Eswatini.[8] According to the IUCN the bark is used in traditional medicine by locals.[1]

Conservation

References

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