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Family: Bombacaceae (Malvaceae) the bombax
or baobab Family
Scientific name: Adansonia
digitata L.
Origin:
Garden origin (Nursery
produced cultivar)
Habitat: It is native to much
of Africa and the most widespread of the Adansonia species, but
restricted to suitable habitats that comprises hot, dry woodland on
stoney, well drained soils, in frost-free areas that receive low
rainfall. It ranges from the dry sub-Saharan scrub to the grassy
savannas/ woodland of South Africa.
It is also widely grown as a street and park tree in the tropics of both
hemispheres.
Ecology: Bats primarily pollinate the large white flowers with
their ruffled petals at night, although many different insects and other
creatures such as birds will visit the sweetly scented flowers.
Conservation status: Not threatened
Common Names include: baobab, dead-rat tree, bottle tree,
monkey-bread tree baobab, Cream of Tartar tree, monkey-bread tree,
lemonade tree (Eng.);
Etymology: Adansonia: Named
after a French surgeon Michel Adanson (1727-1806). digitata:
hand-shaped, referring to the shape of the leaves.
Common Names:

The baobab tree is regarded as being the largest tree
in Africa and the largest succulent plant in the world,
it is leafless for nine months of the year.
Cultivation: Baobabs are quite easily grown from seed although
they are seldom available in nurseries. Grow in good light, don't
over-water and provide a minimum winter temperature of 10-13C as they
cannot tolerate even mild frost. Baobab is very drought tolerant, and
needs no water at all during the winter. Despite its adaptations to dry
climates, baobab will thrive in rainy climates provided it has a well
drained soil provided they are frost free and don't experience cold
winters.
Saplings can be effectively grown in
containers for many years before becoming too large and requiring
to be planted into the ground. In this manner one can move them out of
the cold into a warm position in a glasshouse or indoors behind a sunny
window to prevent frost damage. It can be also trained as a bonsai tree.
Reproduction: The seeds
should be soaked in a container of hot water and allowed to cool, they
may then be sown after soaking for 24 hrs. Sow in trays, pots, etc o in
a well-drained seedling mixture containing one-third sand in a
propagator or warm place to maintain an optimum temperature of 25-27C.
Sowing Depth: 1.5 mm. Seeds are best sown in spring and summer .
Germination may take from two to six weeks. Baobabs grow reasonably
quickly when they are young. It also can be started from cuttings.
Remarks: In the wet months water is stored
in its thick, corky, fire-resistant trunk for the nine dry months ahead.
Some large individuals live to well over a thousand years of age.
However the age of a large large baobabs cannot be reliably established
using tree rings. Carbon dating has shown that a 7 m diameter tree is
about 600 years old, so a large tree is probably over 1000 years old.
This age is a lot less than some previous estimates that have been
placed at over 5000 years old. The baobab is just as beautiful in winter
after the leaves have dropped and the tree's grandly grotesque form can
be seen and enjoyed. The baobab tree is steeped in a wealth of mystique,
legend and superstition wherever it occurs in Africa. It is a tree that
can provide, food, water, shelter and relief from sickness.
Uses: The baobab's bark, leaves, fruit, and trunk are all used.
The bark of the baobab is used for cloth and rope, the leaves for
condiments and medicines, while the fruit, called "monkey bread", is
eaten. Sometimes people live inside of the huge trunks.

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