Ximenia caffra

    Botanical name

    Ximenia caffra (SA No 103)

    Other names

    Sourplum; suurpruim (Afrikaans); morokologa (sePedi)

    Family

    Olacaceae

    Dimensions

    Small tree or large shrub of irregular shape, often 3 to 4 m in height; in Tanzania reported to grow to 15 m

    Description of stem

    Often several stemmed, dark grey and rough bark on older stems; spine-tipped branchlets are common

    Description of leaves

    Dark green, shiny, with orange, hairy sheen, fascicled, margin entire, rolled under

    Description of flowers

    Clusters of small creamy flowers in September and October

    Desciption of seed/fruit

    Ellipsoid, orange-red, mottled fleshy fruit, 2,5 cm in length; edible, but soon sour after the first taste when the leathery skin is broken

    Description of roots

     

    Variation

    Variations with and without persistent light brown hairs on leaves and young branches; two distinct variations, var. caffra with hairs on leaves and young branches occurs in Gauteng and in the northerly parts of Limpopo, whilst var. natalensis with smooth leaves is found in the more easterly parts of the tree's distribution area

    Propagation and cultivation

    Fresh seeds are sown in a compost and river sand mix; plant two-leaf seedlings for a season in containers, then in the ground

    Tolerances

    Thrives in sun, resists drought and can tolerate mild cold

    Uses

    Seeds yield an oil used in a variety of ways; fruit used for making a jelly; fruit eaten by baboons, sometimes by children; popular garden subject that attracts birds and butterflies; reported to have been used in the treatment of among other things the treatment of bilharzia and malaria

    Ecological rarity

    Common

    Pests and diseases

     

    Other

     

    Location

    In wooded areas on hillsides and in grasslands, often on rocky outcrops

    Distribution (SA provinces)

    Gauteng, Mpumalanga, Limpopo, Kwazulu-Natal

    Country

    South Africa, Mozambique, Swaziland, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Zambia