Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Zanthoxylum capense

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Rutaceae

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Sapindales

Genus
  
Zanthoxylum

Zanthoxylum capense Zanthoxylum capense Grow Wild

Similar
  
Zanthoxylum davyi, Vepris lanceolata, Ehretia rigida, Searsia leptodictya, Euclea crispa

The Small knobwood (Zanthoxylum capense) is a species of plant in the Rutaceae family. It occurs in the eastern regions of southern Africa, from the vicinity of Knysna, Western Cape to the Zimbabwean granite shield and coastal Mozambique. It tolerates a range of altitudes, from highveld to coastal elevations, but is most prevalent in dry thickets or on rocky slopes and outcrops.

Zanthoxylum capense httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Their trunks are bare apart from the numerous conical knobs that each terminate in a spine. They bear clusters of compound leaves on the tips of their branches. The leaves and fruit are noticeably citrus-scented. The fruit are round capsules of about 5 mm in diameter, fully covered with glands. When they ripen they split open to release a single black and oil-rich seed.

It is a host plant for the Citrus swallowtail, White-banded swallowtail and Emperor swallowtail butterflies. Similar species are the larger Z. davyi which is more limited to the mist belt regions, and Z. leprieurii that occurs in sand forests of subtropical lowlands.

Zanthoxylum capense FileZanthoxylum capense habitus Waterbergjpg Wikimedia Commons

Zanthoxylum capense FileZanthoxylum capense habitus Waterbergjpg Wikimedia Commons

Zanthoxylum capense Recherche dans la base de donnes prlude

References

Zanthoxylum capense Wikipedia


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