Grassroots Vol 20 No 3 | Page 21
Underground trees
of the Highveld
Richard Gill
Current Address: Johannesburg
E-mail Address: [email protected]
FEATURE
What are underground
trees?
Botanically, an underground tree is referred
to as a geoxylic suffrutex; where
geoxyle refers to a subterranean woody
plant with the bulk of its biomass below
ground, and a suffratex is a shrub with
a woody underground base and is also
known as a subshrub or dwarf shrub. Often
only the tips of their woody branches
(ramets) protrude aboveground, to
support their leaves and flowers. They
are commonly referred to as geoxyles
or geosuffs.
With their underground storage organs
and bud-banks (accumulation of growth
buds able to sprout in future) safely below
ground, they are able to resprout
quickly after disturbances such as fires
(Figure 1), frost or grazing, and it is
thought that some of them can live extraordinarily
long lives. As a result, many
of them produce very few seeds, and
young plants are rare.
Figure 1: A recently burnt firebreak near Tarlton, exposing part of a “forest” of
Sand Apple, Parinari capensis. Note how quickly they resprout after fire.
2a
2d
Professor Braam van Wyk, University of
Pretoria, asked about a video suggesting
a specimen of Sand Apple (Parinari
capensis) in Pretoria is around 13 000
years old, suggested ages in excess of
10 000 years are quite possible for some
specimens, and some may be considerably
older: “The shoots die and renew
continuously, but the clone persists.
Now if an underground tree is essentially
immortal, then it would certainly not
be unrealistic to hypothesize that some
clones in our Highveld grasslands may
be as old as the grasslands in that area
themselves. Hence I suspect that some
of the larger underground tree clones in
southern Africa may be much older than
the 13000 years mentioned.”
2b
2c
2e
While there are challenges with determining
their ages, Lynch et al. (1998)
used radiocarbon dating, molecular
markers and chromosome counts to estimate
the age of a 1200 m wide clone
of Lomatia tasmanica, in Tasmania, at 43
600 years old. While technically more
Figure 2: Erythrina zeyheri. Klipriviersberg Nature Reserve (a,b,c), and roots exposed
after flooding - Bethal area (d,e) © Paul Meintjies
Grassroots Vol 20 No 3 September 2020
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