{"id":11538,"date":"2020-04-30T10:38:15","date_gmt":"2020-04-30T09:38:15","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/selfhelpafrica.org\/onemilliontrees\/?page_id=11538"},"modified":"2024-07-01T18:03:11","modified_gmt":"2024-07-01T17:03:11","slug":"tree-directory","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/selfhelpafrica.org\/onemilliontrees\/tree-directory\/","title":{"rendered":"Tree Directory"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Self Help Africa planting in Malawi, Zambia, Ethiopia and Burkina Faso.<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n
Faidherbia is the ideal tree to intercrop with cereal crops like maize, sorghum, and millet. In Zambia for example, maize yields were 3 tonnes per hectare under Faidherbia canopies and only 2 tonnes per ha. outside the canopies.<\/p>\n
This tree has a unique “Reverse phrenology”, meaning it produces leaves in the dry season and sheds leaves in the rainy season. Also, the tree is able to take nitrogen, an essential fertiliser, out of the atmosphere through bacteria that grows on its roots.<\/p>\n
Where this tree grows spontaneously, farmers protect the seedlings that naturally emerge. This is a system promoted by Self Help Africa in all projects – known as Farmer Managed Natural Regeneration (FMNR), where farmers are trained and supported in managing their resources to maintain and improve their land, farms and livelihoods.
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Self Help Africa planting in Malawi<\/b><\/i><\/p>
The variety of Acacia is very important to to the farming communities Self Help Africa works with in Malawi. The trees are primarily used for conservation of catchments - areas where the rainwater collects and usually drains off into a waterbody (like a river, pond or lake). Planting trees in these catchment areas will help to improve the supply of water that will be used for domestic and agricultural needs.<\/p>
Forested catchments will also help to reduce soil erosion and to buffer watercourses from pollution; to stabilise river banks, reducing bank erosion; and planting trees can help reduce flooding, and slow down flood water during flood events.<\/p><\/span>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div>
Self Help Africa planting in Malawi<\/i><\/b><\/p>
Gliricidia is a fast growing tree common to southern and eastern Africa. The trees are planted for 'intercropping'; to provide fodder, and improve soil fertility.<\/p>
When intercropped with maize, Gliricidia is cut back in the growing season to prevent competition with the maize crop for water, light and nutrients, and the cut leaves are used as mulch - to fertilize the soil.
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Once the maize has been harvested Gliricidia is allowed to re-grow to provide vital fodder for livestock during the dry season. <\/p>\n
Self Help Africa planting in Ethiopia and Burkina Faso<\/i><\/b><\/p>
Neem is a fast-growing and long-lived evergreen tree that can grow to 15 metres tall with a wide-spreading, dense, crown that provides year-round cool shade in even the hottest places.\n\n <\/p>
\n\nA true multipurpose tree, neem is a very valuable plant to grow. It is a very effective medicinal herb for treating fevers, provides food, a very good insecticide and insect repellent (sleeping under a neem tree keeps away mosquitoes and neem headlice treatment is sold in Ireland!). In Africa, farmers also use neem leaves in grain stores keep away insects, and in the hot and dry countries of the Sahel, Neem is often planted along streets to provide shade.<\/p>\n
Self Help Africa planting in Ethiopia and Burkina Faso<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n
This may not be a species you're familiar with but it's in food and products you use every day. The tree produces Gum Arabic - a stabilizer used in everyday foods and in a very well known Irish beverage - it helps make the creamy head on a pint of Guinness!\n<\/p>
\nIn Africa - the Acacia Senegal grows in semi-arid areas, in countries like Burkina Faso and Ethiopia, where other agriculture can be quite fragile. Sap collection (the 'gum'), provides employment and income for farmers, but more than that the leaves and fruit give fodder for sheep and goats; and the roots help fix nitrogen in the soil.\n<\/p>
\nSelf Help Africa has also established several beekeeping projects in the communities where the Acacias grow, and the tree flowers provide nectar for those bees! This results in delicious nutritious honey that families eat at home and sell to earn extra income.
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<\/span><\/p>\n Self Help Africa planting in Kenya and Uganda<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n Also known as 'griveria' locally, t<\/span>he Silky Oak is an erect, single-stemmed tree typically reaching 20-30 m tall and 80 cm in diameter. Grevillea is one of the most important trees to grow, and be planted in the tropical highlands of East and Central Africa.<\/p>\n It is commonly planted as a boundary tree around the perimeter of small farms, in a single row at 2-2.5 m spacing. It is also planted in rows between small fields, and as scattered individuals over crops such as coffee and maize.<\/p>\n This tree is also planted in rows along the contour to conserve soil on sloping lands in the tropical highlands. There is also some evidence to show that using the leaves as a mulch can reduce soil losses on sloping land.<\/p>\n For the farmers Self Help Africa works with in these upland regions \u2013 being able to protect and nourish the soil is vital to improve farm yields and income.<\/p><\/div><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa planting in Ethiopia, Zambia, Uganda, Malawi, Kenya<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n Although native to Asia, Moringa is widely grown in Africa, where its leaves are used for spinach, the pods are cooked like green beans and the seeds from more mature pods are cooked like peas or roasted like nuts.\n<\/p> \nMoringa grows quickly and is drought resistant. The dried leaves retain lots of vitamins and minerals.\n\n <\/p> \n\nThe farmers Self Help Africa works with in East and Southern Africa are encouraged and trained in growing moringa as a way to improve child and maternal nutrition.\n\n <\/p> \n\nOil from moringa seeds is used in foods, perfume, and hair care products, and as a machine lubricant. The seed cake remaining after oil extraction is used as a fertilizer and both the seeds and the seed cake have the unique ability to purify water. <\/p><\/span><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa planting in Kenya<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n Casuarina is a remarkable evergreen tree with a finely branched, feathery crown. Unlike most trees Casuarina is salt tolerant and grows well in sand, so it can be used to control erosion along coastlines, estuaries, riverbanks and waterways and to stabilise sand dunes.\n<\/p>\n \nIt is often planted for reclaiming and improving the land. The abundance of highly branch twigs absorb wind energy amazingly well, and in areas with hot, dry winds the tree protects crops and animal herds.\n<\/p>\n \nCasuarina fixes atmospheric nitrogen through symbiosis with a root fungi. Because of this partnership Casuarina is able to grow vigorously on barren, polluted sites and thrive in deep sandy soils.\n<\/p>\n \nCasuarina is idea for planting on field boundaries in arid and semi-arid areas as it does not shade the crop very much, adds nitrogen to the soil and yields substantial quantities of green leaf manure on lopping.\n\nSHA is planting casuarina in sandy areas in Kenya, especially along the coast.<\/p><\/div><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa planting in Ethiopia<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n The Peruvian Peppertree is a fast growing, elegant evergreen tree with a wide crown of weeping foliage between 6 to 15 metres tall. It produces flowers from April to June and is one of the few trees that will contain male only or female only flowers, where separate male and female plants must be grown if further seed is required.\n\n <\/p>\n \n\nThe Peppertree is used for food - its lush red berries produced can be dried and roasted and used as a pepper substitute. On a larger scale, the fruit can be distilled to create an oil which is used in spiced baked goods, chewing gum and sweets\n<\/p>\n \nFarmers working with Self Help Africa plant the Peruvian Pepper tree to restore degraded land areas in Ethiopia.<\/p><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa planting in Ethiopia<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n Familiar to everyone from David Attenborough\u2019s documentaries and films like \u201cThe Lion King\u201d and \u201cOut of Africa\u201d, probably no other tree symbolises the African savannas as much as flat topped Umbrella Thorn.\n\n \n<\/p> \nFound in Africa from Ethiopia to Mozambique and Zimbabwe the Umbrella Thorn is drought tolerant, produces its own nitrogen and will grow on degraded land and along gullies, making it a good species for restoring degraded land. The Umbrella Thorn provides an edible gum, medicine, fodder and shade for livestock and the well-known acacia honey. The Umbrella Thorn is one of the species that SHA plants to help restore degraded land areas in Ethiopia.<\/p><\/div><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa planting in Malawi and Zambia<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n Marula is a medium-sized deciduous tree, indigenous to Southern Africa, the parklands of the Sahel and Sudan, and Madagascar.\n<\/p>\n \nCollecting the fruit of wild marula tree is an important source of income for women in rural communities. The fruit is eaten at home, and sold at market; and the juice and pulp are mixed with water and fermented to make traditional marula beer. There are local tales of elephants becoming drunk on the fallen and fermented fruits!\n<\/p>\n \nCommercially the frozen fruit puree is used in juice blends and marula oil is used as an ingredient in cosmetics as a skin moisturizer and as an edible oil in Southern Africa.<\/p><\/div><\/div> \nSelf Help Africa planting in Malawi<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n Albizia lebbeck has been commonly called the \u2018Woman\u2019s Tongue Tree\u2019 or the \u2018Shak Shak tree\u2019. These names come from the rattling sound the seeds make inside the pods when it is windy. These seeds are edible and can be harvested when the pods turn yellow. They are dried in the baking sun before they go brittle and can be beaten with a flail to be extracted and combined in a meal.\n\n <\/p> \n\nThis tree can grow to 30m in height and produces large white flowers which are very fragrant and delicate looking.\n\n <\/p> \n\nSelf Help Africa plants Albezia for shading crops like coffee and banana, for shelterbelts and for providing nitrogen to crops. Albezia also provides fodder for small livestock.<\/p><\/div><\/div><\/div> \nSelf Help Africa planting in Kenya, Zambia and Burkina Faso<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n Familiar to everyone, the cashew is a tropical evergreen tree that can grow up to 14 metres, and the smaller dwarf species reaching 6 metres. There are over 600 species in the Anacardium family, including mango, pistachio) but the cashew is by far the most economically important.\n\n<\/p> \n\nThe Cashew tree is mainly grown in the wet and dry tropics where it can withstand temperatures of above 40 degrees Celsius. They are excellent trees for warmer regions and are pretty much drought resistant. SHA is promoting the planting of new cashew orchards, and the rehabilitation of old orchards in Kenya, Zambia and Burkina Faso. New orchards and old trees are being replaced with dwarf varieties as these can produce economic yields after 3 years as compared to waiting 8 years for the traditional species.\n\n<\/p> \nTo improve both soil fertility and household nutrition SHA has developed a system of planting beans between the cashew trees.\n\n<\/p> \n\nThe cashew nut is very unusual as it hangs underneath the cashew apple, rather than being hidden inside the fruit. The cashew apple matures in 90 days, can be eaten fresh, is high in Vitamin C and has a refreshing, sweet taste. Cashew apples are also used to make the alcoholic drink \u2018Feni\u2019.\n\n<\/p> \nThe cashew nut is high in protein and is eaten across the world. Export demand is high and cashew nuts are a very export valuable crop. \n \n<\/p><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa Planting in Burkina Faso<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n Balanites aegyptiaca is found across the Sahel-Savannah region of Africa.\n\nBalanites is valuable in arid regions because it produces fruit even in dry times. The yellow, single-seeded fruit is edible but bitter. Some trees have unusually sweet fruit and these can be grafted onto the roots of bitter trees.\n\n\n <\/p> \nThe fruit can mixed into porridge and eaten by nursing mothers; and is sometimes fermented for alcoholic drinks. Other parts of the tree are used as food during the \u2018hunger gap\u2019. The leaves are eaten raw or cooked, the oily seed is boiled to make it less bitter and eaten mixed with sorghum, and even the flowers can be eaten.\n\n <\/p> \n\nAnother important use for the Desert Date is the control of the parasites Bilharzia and Guinea worm. These parasites are spread by water snails and copepods. Bilharzia is particularly widespread in the tropics wherever people are in contact with lakes and wetlands: farmers irrigating their crops, fisherfolk, children playing. The bark and fruits of the Desert Date repel and kill the snails and copepods and Balanites is often planted on the border of irrigation canals and rivers so that the fallen fruits control the bilharzia carrying snails.\n\n <\/p><\/div><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa planting in Malawi and Zambia<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n\n The Shea Nut Tree is an important part of the economies of the countries of the Sahel, and is Burkina Faso\u2019s third most important export, after cotton and livestock.\n<\/p>\n \nIn West Africa, shea nut cultivation is particularly important for women, as they control the shea nut butter value chain. Self Help Africa works with women farmers in Burkina Faso to plant and protect shea nut trees, helping women maintain and earn an independent income, even in the drier seasons.\n<\/p>\n \nThe tree starts producing nuts when it is 10 to 15 years old and can produce nuts for up to 200 years. The fruits resemble large plums and an average tree can produce 15 to 20 kilograms of fresh fruit per season.\n<\/p>\n \nAn edible oil is extracted from the nuts that has the texture of butter at room temperature. Shea Nut butter is used for cooking, and as an ingredient in chocolate. But it's also well known for its use in cosmetics, for example skin moisturizers, hair conditioners, lipsticks and lip gloss.\n<\/p><\/div><\/div> \n\nSelf Help Africa planting in Malawi, Kenya, Uganda<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n Macadamia is an evergreen tree that grows up to 12 metres in height. The genus is comprised of 4 species but all produce the same fruit, which is more commonly known as the macadamia nut. The tree takes between 5 and 8 years before producing its first fruit. Once the nuts are ripe they fall from the tree and can be easily picked from the ground. Even with this easy harvest, only a few nuts get produced on each tree each year which makes macadamias most expensive nut in the world!<\/p>\n Malawi and Kenya have established macadamia industries, and Uganda is catching up.<\/p>\n Macadamias produce an oil which can be as high as 80% fat content. This oil is commonly used in cooking and cosmetics.<\/p><\/span><\/div><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa planting in Ethiopia<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n\n \n\n \n\nThe African Olive is a subspecies of the European Olive. Is a neatly shaped evergreen tree with a dense spreading crown (9 x 12 m) of glossy grey-green to dark-green foliage. It has strong smelling white flowers from July to March, which is quickly followed by a glossy fruit that ripens from green to red to black.\n<\/p>\n\n \nThe olives are usually made into a non-drying oil which is used on salads and in cooking. And the fruits are also a popular food amongst native wild animals, such as monkeys, baboons, mongooses, bushpigs, warthogs, bats and birds.\n<\/p>\n\n \nThe African Olive tree is an asset on farms in very dry areas because it is extremely hardy and is an excellent fodder tree for livestock. Unfortunately, the African Olive is becoming endangered, so Self Help Africa plantings will act as a conservation measure for this traditional species.\n<\/p><\/div><\/div> \nSelf Help Africa planting in Uganda<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nAs known by locals as \u201cPowderpuff\u201d, Calliandra is a small, fast growing shrub that produces flowers that look like umbrella clusters. Calliandra produces a beautiful pink coloured flower during the dry seasons of June to September. This colour attracts lots of bees and the honey made from Calliandra calothyrsus has a very unique sweet taste. Calliandra is one of the favourite flowers of sunbirds, the stunning African ecological equivalent to the American Hummingbirds.\n<\/p>\n \nCalliandra produces its own nitrogen, and grows in many areas, including less fertile soils, which makes it a brilliant addition to the African landscape. Self Help Africa is planting Calliandra calothyrsus for the rehabilitation of erosion prone areas in Uganda and to provide nitrogen for crops. Calliandra is commonly planted in small villages as strips of hedgerow, this protects against fire and illegal wood cutting.<\/p><\/div><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa planting in Kenya and Uganda<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nRiverhemp is the common name for plants in the Sesbania family. Sesbania is a small, but fast growing tree that grows to about 5 metres in height after only 6 months!\n<\/p>\n \nSesbania produces its own nitrogen and Self Help Africa encourages farmers to grow this tree as an \u2018intercrop\u2019 with maize, bean and cotton in Kenya and Uganda to reduce the need for farmers to buy nitrogen fertilisers.\n<\/p>\n \nThe yellow flowers are used for decorative purposes and can also be eaten as a vegetable. The fresh seeds are poisonous to humans but they can be eaten if they are soaked for 3 days and then cooked. They can also be ground into a fermented paste known as \u2018Soumbara\u2019.\n<\/p>\n \nLocally, the leaves are used to treat scorpion stings, boils and abscesses where they are considered to have antibiotic properties. The seeds can also be made into an antibacterial medicinal oil which is widely used amongst small communities.<\/p><\/div><\/div> \nSelf Help Africa planting in Malawi<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nSelf Help Africa Planting in Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Zambia, Uganda\n<\/p>\n \nLeucaena leucocephala, or more commonly known as \u2018White lead tree\u2019, is a fast-growing evergreen tree that can grow up to 20 metres tall, produces its own nitrogen and can be repeatedly cut back. Leucaena is widely cultivated for shade, animal feed, firewood and soil fertility.\n<\/p>\n \nThe young pods are edible and are high in protein. They can be used for cooking, where they are commonly found in spicy dishes.\n<\/p>\n \nSelf Help Africa is working with farmers to plant Leucaena in their fields to stabilise the soil, fertilise the crops and feed small livestock such as goats.<\/p><\/div><\/div><\/div> <\/span><\/p>\n Self Help Africa planting in Kenya, Uganda, Malawi, Zambia. <\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n Jacaranda mimosifolia <\/em>(jacaranda, blue jacaranda, fern tree) is a deciduous tree up to 20 m in height with spreading branches making a light crown. Bark pale brown and furrowed, transverse cracks dividing the ridges between the furrows into long, narrow scales. The bole almost always short and malformed, and up to 40- 50 cm in diameter.<\/p>\n Trees are being planted in in forested areas, agroforestry systems, plantations, boundaries, homesteads<\/p>\n This species\u2019 relatively large flowers easily attract bees; therefore, it is suitable for bee forage. Extracts from its leaves, bark, and roots have medicinal value.\u00a0 The tree creates pleasant open shade and can be used effectively as a screen or as a windbreak. The finely cut foliage is attractive adding to its flowers\u2019 ornamental value.<\/p><\/div><\/div> <\/span><\/p>\n Also known as \u2018Mpululu\u2019 <\/em>Terminalia sericea (silver terminalia) is a small, well-formed deciduous tree, 3-16 m with spreading branches to a light rather flat crown. It\u2019s bark dark grey or grey brown, rather rough with longitudinal fissures; branchlets with characteristic purplish bark peeling off in strips, pale below; simple leaves clustered towards the tips of branchlets, 5-12 cm long, narrowed to the base, pale green, leathery, with silvery silky hairs below. Young leaves pink and dying leaves deep pink before they fall; flowers are cream to pale yellow, in short spikes to 5 cm; buds are silky hairy, opening with new leaves; and fruits pink purple-brown, to 4 cm long, oval and flat, winged around the central seed, tip notched.<\/p>\n The tree occurs in Brachystegia woodland and wooded grasslands, especially on sandy soils, between 450-1,300 m. It can be propagated using seedlings or root suckers Uses include medicine from leaves and roots, bee forage (flowers), rope from bark , red dye also from the bark.<\/p><\/div><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa Planting in Ethiopia<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nDodonaea viscosa var. angustifolia (hopbush) is a fast growing drought and wind resistant indigenous evergreen which grows up to 5 m high. Dodonaea prefers a sandy substrate and requires little water once established. The roots bind the soil and Self Help Africa is working with communities in Ethiopia planting Dodonaea to stabilize sand dunes and control soil erosion in the Lake Ziway region.\n<\/p>\n \nThe tree forms a dense bush which is ideal for bird nesting sites and the flowers attract butterflies. The seed has papery wings and is dispersed by wind.\n<\/p>\n \nIn Africa the plant is often used in traditional medicine to treat common complaints like fever, colds, sore throats, coughs and the leaves can be used as wound dressings.\n<\/p><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa Planting in Malawi<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nSiamese Senna is a medium-size, evergreen tree with distinctive yellow flowers. The tree is regularly grown as a \u2018shade\u2019 tree for other crops such as coffee.\n <\/p>\nThe tree is regularly cut back to provide much needed fodder, mulch for fertilizing land to grow other crops, and the cut back branches offer a supply of firewood.\n\n\n<\/p><\/div><\/div><\/div> <\/span><\/p>\n Self Help Africa planting in Uganda, Malawi, Mozambique, Zambia. <\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n Protea welwitschia <\/em>(cluster-head sugar brush, dwarf savanna sugar brush) grows as a spreading, multi-stemmed\u00a0shrub\u00a0or small, gnarled, bushy\u00a0tree. In tropical\u00a0East Africa\u00a0and\u00a0Zambia\u00a0it grows to 1\u20133 metres, exceptionally 5 metres in height. In its shrub form it may have an underground bole or rootstock, from which the branches arise.\u00a0The trunk grows to 30 centimetres in diameter at the base. It is gnarled, and covered in an irregularly fissured, brown-black bark.\u00a0The young stems are covered in a brown woolly hairs.<\/p>\n The adult plant can survive the periodic\u00a0wildfires\u00a0that burn through its habitat by re-sprouting from the underground bole and hence considered among landscape conservation tree species. It also acts as a windbreak, used for its ornamental value, and its flowers are good bee forage.<\/p><\/div><\/div> <\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n Self Help Africa planting on-farm in most countries as a food source<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n Carica papaya <\/em>(pawpaw, papaya) is a is an evergreen, tree-like herb, 2-10 m tall, usually unbranched, although sometimes branched due to injury, containing white latex in all parts. Stem cylindrical, 10-30 cm in diameter, hollow with prominent leaf scars and spongy-fibrous tissue. Has an extensive rooting system.<\/p>\n Green papaya fruit is cooked as a vegetable. Ripe papaya fruit is a breakfast and dessert fruit that can used to make fruit salads, refreshing drinks, jam, jelly, marmalade, candies, and crystallized fruit. Young leaves are sometimes eaten. Other uses: Papain, a proteolytic enzyme present in the latex from green fruit is extracted to be used in beverage, food and pharmaceutical industries. It is also used in bathing hides, degumming silk and softening wool. Carapine, an alkaloid present in papaya, has medicinal value. \u00a0The fruit and juice are eaten for gastrointestinal ailments; a fresh leaf cataplasm is used to treat sores.<\/p><\/div><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa Planting in Kenya<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nAlbizia chinensis is, as the name indicates, native to south and southeast Asia, It is grown as a shade tree for coffee and the leaves and pods are excellent fodder for goats.\n<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa Planting in Kenya<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nThis is a species of Alder from the mountains for Mexico and South America. The timber is light to reddish-brown and fine grained and is used for building bridges, coffins, furniture and plywood. Alders put nitrogen from the atmosphere into the soil through their roots, but this done though a symbiotic relationship with a fungi, unlike Leguminous species that fix nitrogen through root bacteria.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa Planting in Kenya<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nSudan Teak is a small to medium-sized evergreen tree, 4-15m high, heavily branched with a spreading, umbrella-shaped or rounded crown. The trunk is often curved or crooked. <\/p> The heartwood is pinkish- brown, reasonably durable and relatively termite resistant which it works easily and polishes well but is often twisted and difficult to saw. The timber is used for flooring, high-quality furniture and beehives. The fruit is edible, the leaves can be used for animal forage and Cordia is often planted as a shade tree in coffee plantations.\n<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa Planting in Kenya<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nCroton is in the family Euphorbiaceae, a family of plants that produce white latex. It is fast-growing tree, growing up to 36 meters high and reaches maturity after five to seven years. Croton is commonly found in natural forests and is planted on farms as a boundary tree. It is a drought-resistant tree that can survive in harsh climatic conditions and is not browsed by animals. <\/p> Croton produced large quantities of inedible nuts that can be used to make biofuels. Compared to diesel, Croton oil is self-lubricating and has a higher flash point, making it safer with lower exhaust emissions. The seed cake can be used as animal feed and compost. Croton is indigenous to ten countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, including Somalia, Kenya, Uganda, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Burundi, Tanzania, Malawi, Zambia, and Mozambique. <\/p>\n <\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa Planting in Kenya<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nCypress is an evergreen tree, native to Mexico and Central America, which grows to a height of about 40 m and 70cm diameter and related to the popular hedge species the Leyland Cypress. Cypress is a popular softwood species for timber, building poles and paper pulp in Africa but attacks by the cypress aphid, Cinara cupressi, can kill the trees. Cypress can be intercropped with other plants while they\u2019re still young.\n<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa Planting in Kenya<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nMusizi can reach up to 15-25(-45) m tall with an open crown and exceptionally straight trunk up to 50(-180) cm in diameter. Musizi is fast growing and productive and is often grown in plantations as an alternative to the slower growing pines and cypress, but the wood is not as durable and Musizi can become an invasive species in some areas. <\/p>\n <\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div> <\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nMarkhamia is a skinny evergreen tree 10-15 m high, with a narrow, irregular crown and bright yellow flowers in showy clusters, \n <\/p> \nMarkhamia grows fast in good soil, and plants can attain growth rates of more than 2 m\/year. Markhamia is found across East Africa and is very common in Uganda where it is used for roofing poles and area of Kampala, Nsambya, is named after the tree.\n\n<\/p>\n<\/div><\/div> <\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nAfrican teak is an impressive tree, growing up to 50 tall which produces a strong, dense and durable dark brown hardwood timber. Avenues of Mvule can still be seen in Eastern Uganda, planted by the Buganda Prince Semei Kakungulu, a warrior and statesman of the powerful Baganda tribe who was appointed the British Colonial Administrator for Eastern Uganda. Kakungulu converted to Judaism and founded the Jewish community in Uganda.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa Planting in Kenya\n<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\n\n\n\n\nPodocarpus is an ancient group of conifers (pines), related to Yews and, like most conifers, it is evergreen. Podocarpus is mainly found on the temperate mountains of Africa: Mt Mulanje in Malawi is famous for the Mulanje Podocarpus. It grows slowly up to 30 meters in height. A chemotherapy drug used in treatment of leukaemia is extracted from Podocarpus. \n <\/p>\n <\/p><\/div><\/div> \nSelf Help Africa planting in Kenya<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\n\n\n\nTerminalia is a large family of trees with over 100 species, including the commonly known \u2018Umbrella Tree\u2019, Terminalia superb. They get their name from the Latin word \u2018terminus\u2019 which refers to the fact that the leaves appear at the very tips of the shoots. This is what gives it its unique umbrella shape. Several Terminalia sp. are fast growing soft woods that can be grown as an alternative to eucalyptus. Others are hard woods, with timber similar to oak and mahogany.\n<\/p> \nSHA plants indigenous Terminalia species browni, glaucescens, iverensis and mantaly for crop shade in coffee and banana and for restoring natural forests. <\/p>\n <\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div> \n<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\n Self Help Africa Planting in Kenya<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n\nThe Meru Oak is a magnificent tree when mature, being one of the largest trees that are native to Kenya. The wood is durable and has a beautiful attractive grain, but the tree has been over-exploited and is now very rare. Self Help Africa is planting to help restore the population of this species\n <\/p>\n <\/p><\/div><\/div> Self Help Africa Planting in Kenya<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n <\/b><\/i><\/p>\n \n\nUgandan Greenheart is an evergreen tree native to Africa, found across East Africa. The wood is very strong and resistant to insect attack. The leaves are used to add flavour and spice when cooking food. The species can be planted for crop shade; and the fallen leaves and branches provide green manure and mulch for crop growing. <\/p>\n <\/p>\n<\/div><\/div><\/div> Red mangrove is one of the most valuable trees for creating and preserving shorelines. Sediments depositing among their adventitious prop roots can eventually build up to create land. Seeds often germinate while they are still on the tree. After they drop, they float to a new location where they can begin growing in the sediment below the water surface.<\/span><\/p>\n It is a land reclamation plant.<\/span><\/p>\n Red mangroves will often be seen growing in shallow lagoons away from the land. Plants typically reach 6m tall, although old trees reach 22m tall are not uncommon in undisturbed, natural settings. Plants respond poorly to pruning.<\/span><\/p>\n Leaf color: dark to medium green on top, paler green underneath with tiny black dots that may require a hand lens to view<\/span><\/p>\nMoringa, drumstick tree (Moringa oliefera)<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
<\/p>\nCasuarina equistifolia, (also known as beech she-oak, common ironwood)<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
Peruvian pepper tree (Schinus mole)<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
Umbrella thorn (Acacia abyssinica)<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
Marula (Sclerocarya birrea)<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
Albizia lebbeck \n<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
Cashew (Anacardium occidentale)\n<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
Desert date (Balanites aegyptiaca)<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
Shea nut (Vitellaria paradoxa)<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
Macadamia
\n<\/b><\/h2>\nAfrican Olive (Olea europaea subsp. africana))<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
Calliandra calothyrsus\n<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
Sesbania sesban<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
Leuceana leucophala (White Lead Tree)\n<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
Jacaranda mimosifolia<\/strong><\/h2>\n
<\/h2>\n
Terminalia sericea<\/b><\/h2>\n
\nSelf Help Africa planting in Malawi, Zambia, Mozambique<\/b><\/i><\/p>\n\nDodonaea viscosa<\/b><\/h2>\n\n\n
\nSiamese senna (Senna siamea)\n\n <\/b><\/h2>\n\n\n
\nProtea Welwitschia<\/b><\/h2>\n
\nCarica Papaya<\/b><\/h2>\n\nAlbizia chinensis<\/b><\/h2>\n\n\n
\nMexican Alder\n(Alnus acuminata)\n\n\n <\/b><\/h2>\n\n\n
\nSudan Teak \n(Cordia africana)\n<\/b><\/h2>\n\n\n
\nCroton\n(Croton megalocarpus)\n\n\n\n <\/b><\/h2>\n\n\n
\nCupressus lusitanica (white cedar) \n<\/b><\/h2>\n\n\n
\nMusizi Umbrella Tree (Maesopsis eminii) \n\n\n\n\n\n <\/b><\/h2>\n\n\n
\nMarkhamia\n(Marhhamia lutea\/platycalx)\n\n<\/b><\/h2>\n\n\n
\nAfrican teak (Milicia excelsa,\nMvule, iroko)\n\n\n\n\n\n <\/b><\/h2>\n\n\n
Podocarpus\n(Podocarpus latifolius,\nPodocarpus milanjianus)\n\n<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
\nTerminalia Brownii\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n <\/b><\/h2>\n\n\n
Meru oak (Vitex keniensis) \n\n<\/b><\/h2>\n\n
\nUgandan greenheart\n(Warbugia Ugandensis)\n\n\n\n\n <\/b><\/h2>\n\n
RED MANGROVE (RHIZOPHORA MANGLE) <\/b><\/h2>\n