Euphorbia excelsa

    Botanical name

    Euphorbia excelsa

    Other names

    Olifants River euphorbia; olifantsriviernaboom (Afrikaans)

    Family

    Euphorbiaceae

    Dimensions

    A spiny, succulent tree of occasionally up to 10 m in height with a compact rounded crown of stem tips

    Description of stem

    Vertical ridges occur on the single erect stem, indicating where the branches had fallen; whitish bark longitudinally fissured on the main stem among the young stem branches; the young stems are quadrangular, curving up in a regular candelabrum fashion, yellow-green to blue-green, smooth surfaces with sharp spines on the four ridges; they emerge in a whorl or regular ring at regular intervals along the stem; they are narrowed at regular intervals corresponding with the growth season length added

    Description of leaves

    Absent as the rudimentary leaves fall early

    Description of flowers

    Greenish-yellow occurring in summer into autumn; the four bracts on the cyme stalk are distinctive of this species as the other tree euphorbia species have only two

    Desciption of seed/fruit

    Three-lobed capsule from the end of summer and in autumn

    Description of roots

     

    Variation

     

    Propagation and cultivation

     

    Tolerances

    Drought resistant

    Uses

    Occasional garden plant

    Ecological rarity

    Not threatened in its habitat, although only occurring in a limited area

    Pests and diseases

     

    Other

     

    Location

    Dry rocky slopes in summer rainfall areas

    Distribution (SA provinces)

    Limpopo

    Country

    South Africa