Juniperus procera

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Related Links
The entire tree at the Nairobi Arboretum.
© Ellis RP
The bark is finely and deeply longitudinally grooved. Peels with age.
© Ellis RP
Juniperus procera trunk
© Patrick Maundu
Adventitous shoot on declining tree, central Kenya
© William M. Ciesla, Forest Health Management International, www.forestryimages.org
Natural forest with Podocarpus understory, Krisia Forest, Kenya
© William M. Ciesla, Forest Health Management International, www.forestryimages.org

Local names:
Amharic (tid,tedh), Arabic (arar), English (pencil cedar,East African pencil cedar,East African cedar,cedar,African pencil cedar), Swahili (mwangati), Tigrigna (tsihdi), Trade name (cedar,African pencil cedar)

Juniperus procera is an afro-montane tree often reaching 30-35 m high; can reach 50 m,  actually the largest tree of its genus. Bole straight but sharply tapered, often with a pronounced twist, commonly heavily fluted, reaches 2-3 m dbh. Bark pale brown to reddish-brown, thin, fibrous, with thin shallow longitudinal fissures, exfoliating in thin papery strips.

Leaves grey or glaucous when mature, about 1 mm long, acute, hooded and keeled at the apex, and with a narrow translucent margin and an elliptic oil gland on the back near the base. Juvenile leaves deciduous, in whorls of 3 on shoots, 1-2 cm long, linear and spine tipped, lower part decurrent on the branch, oil gland on abaxial surface, linear, extending 75% of the leaf length. As plant ages, the leaves gradually change until foliage characteristic of mature tree is produced.

Inflorescence a dioecious cone. Male cones solitary, terminal on short branchlets, small (about 3 mm long), ellipsoid to subglobose, yellowish, consisting of 5-6 pairs of decussate, subpeltate, obtuse or blunt apiculate scales, each with 2-3 pollen sacs. Female cones solitary, terminal, on short lateral shoots, consisting of 3-4 pairs decussate fleshy scales and bearing a solitary erect ovule.

Fruit berrylike, globose or subglobose, reddish-brown to blue-black, waxy, composed of confluent, swollen, fleshy scales with distinguishable tips on female cone, 4-8 mm diameter when ripe, containing up to 4 brown seeds about 5 mm long, with a woody testa, each flattened or triangular. Additional 1-3 smaller aborted seeds are common.

Juniperus is the classical Latin name of the junipers, from the Celtic word for rough, referring to the texture of the bark. The specific name, ‘procera’, is Latin for tall or high.

Ecology

J. procera and J. excelsa make up a closely related species pair, which together cover a distribution area largely coinciding with that of Olea europaea ssp cuspidata; it is also associated with Podocarpus falcatus. It is an important component of forest that is transitional between dry, single-dominant afro-montane forest and semi-evergreen bushland and thicket. J. procera will not regenerate in mature forest but is replaced by Podocarpus forest and similar forest types. The species is susceptible to fire.

Native range
Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Yemen, Republic of, Zimbabwe

Tree management

J. procera can be grown in plantations, in homesteads or on boundaries. Weeding has to be carried out at least once in a year during the early stages of growth. Early pruning should take place following 3-6 years of establishment. First thinning is done in the 5th year, when about 50% of the stems should be removed. Due to the acidic substances released from the decomposing leaves, which are harmful to crops, intercropping is not recommended.

Seed storage behaviour is orthodox; viability can be maintained for several years in hermetic storage at 3 deg. C with 7-8% mc. There are about 40 000-50 000 seeds/kg. Due to the hard seed coat, hot water or acid pretreatment is recommended; immersing the seed in hot water at 100 deg. C, for 1 minute or soaking in sulphuric acid for 10 minutes increases germination rate. Stratification in damp sand at 3 deg. C for 60 days is another alternative. On average, mature and pretreated seeds have a germination rate of 60-70% within 25-80 days.

J. procera and J. excelsa make up a closely related species pair, which together cover a distribution area largely coinciding with that of Olea europaea ssp cuspidata; it is also associated with Podocarpus falcatus. It is an important component of forest that is transitional between dry, single-dominant afro-montane forest and semi-evergreen bushland and thicket. J. procera will not regenerate in mature forest but is replaced by Podocarpus forest and similar forest types. The species is susceptible to fire.

Established through seeds and wildings. Seedlings take 1-2 years in the nursery before they are ready for planting out. Close initial spacing of 2 x 2 m is recommended to limit the crown level.

Apiculture: Older trees are usually hollow and can be used in making beehives.

Wood burns quite well hence a useful species for firewood.

Fibre: The wood is suitable for making hardboard and particleboard.

Timber: The wood is fine textured, straight-grained and of medium hardness, difficult to season, rather brittle at the edges; it splits on nailing, is durable, easy to work and polish, and whittles and glues well. Mainly used for construction, power transmission posts, fencing and telegraphic poles, manufacturing pencils, furniture. Cedar wood has a distinctive smell. Heartwood resistant to termite attack.

Shade or shelter: The spreading crown of the tree forms a suitable shade.

Lipids: Cedar wood oil distilled from sawdust is used in the cosmetic industry to manufacture perfumes.

Medicine: The bark and leaves are used for medicinal purposes.

Ornamental: The species is a frequently planted as an ornamental tree.

J. procera can be planted on boundaries and as a windbreak.