Buddleja saligna

    Botanical name

    Buddleja saligna (SA No 636)

    Other names

    False olive; butterfly bush; chilianthus olearaceus; witolien (Afrikaans); mothlware (Tswana); ungqeba (Xhosa)

    Family

    Buddlejaceae (some records place it in Scrophulariaceae or Loganiaceae!)

    Dimensions

    Shrub or small to medium tree; slender, erect evergreen; 2 to 7 m; in the warm high rainfall areas it may reach 10 m

    Description of stem

    Brown, greyish brown; flaking, fissured; the young branchlets tend to be square

    Description of leaves

    Oblong or lanceolate, decussate; dark green above, grey, hairy below; netveining conspicuously raised and linked along the inside of the edges

    Description of flowers

    Abundant terminal and axillary heads of small, creamy-white, pleasantly scented flowerheads structured in three-flowered cymes; from August to January

    Description of seed/fruit

    Small, ovoid, hairy capsule, 2 mm in length, containing very small seeds

    Description of roots

     

    Variation

     

    Propagation and cultivation

    Grows easily from seed and cuttings; fast-growing

    Tolerances

    Hardy in the dry summer rainfall areas, frost resistant

    Uses

    Garden tree with spectacular spring flowers, an option for the smaller garden; used as a bonsai species; leaf decoctions used medicinally for coughs and colds, sometimes for thrush, sores and even diabetes and tuberculosis; the roots are sometimes used as a purgative by indigenous populations; the straight stems are good for fence posts and the wood is also used for smaller utensils

    Ecological rarity

    Common, robust spontaneous propagation in some areas as a pioneer tree

    Pests and diseases

     

    Other

    Attracts insects and thus insect-eating birds

    Location

    Dry slopes in woodland, rocky outcrops, forest margins and ravines; it is often a pioneer for indigenous bush

    Distribution

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

    Country

    South Africa, Lesotho, Zimbabwe

     


    Buddleja saligna; Photographed by Ricky Mauer

    Buddleja saligna; Photographed by Ricky Mauer