Local names:
Afrikaans (wollerige kapperbos), Amharic (gumero), Arabic (sharube), English (woolly caper-bush), French (caprier d΄ Afrique), Shona (khawa), Somali (gombor lik), Swahili (mbada paka), Tigrigna (andel)
Capparis tomentosa is often a spiny scrambler or a small tree that grows up to 10 m tall, with an upright trunk up to 13-15 cm in diameter and covered with scattered spines. Trees are well branched and branches are normally covered with thick yellow hairs; even the robust, recurved spines are often hairy. Leaves soft and velvety, light green to greyish-green, sometimes rusty coloured, alternate, 2.5-8 cm long, 1.3-3.8 cm wide, oval, oblong, or egg shaped, usually thickly velvet but sometimes smooth; tip usually rounded with a sharp, short point, sometimes notched or blunt; base rounded or narrowed; margin entire and rolled under. Spines grow in the axils of the leaves and are short, downward hooked and sharply pointed, broad based and vicious. Petiole up to 10 mm long, densely velvety. Buds grow in clusters and open into large, fragrant flowers with pale yellowish-green petals, up to 3.5 cm in diameter, encircling a tuft of long, slender, white or pink stamens 3.5 cm long; conspicuous gynophore. The flowers develop into pendulous fruits from the size of a cherry to that of a golf ball, with a stout neck or stalk, globose, 3.5 cm in diameter, pink to bright orange when ripe, often hanging in great numbers, with a semi-transparent bluish-grey flesh surrounding and strongly adhering to the brown seeds. Seeds are oval and smooth. The generic name is derived from the Arabic 'kapar', the name for Capparis spinosa. The specific name ‘tomentosa’ means ‘densely hairy’ in reference to the hairiness of the leaves and branches.
Ecology
The species grows from Natal, Swaziland, Transkei, Zululand, and eastern and northern Transvaal, westward across Botswana into northern Namibia, and northwards into tropical Africa. It occurs in coastal bush, forests, riverbanks, mountain slopes, evergreen forests, hot and dry thornveld, and in arid sandy plains. It grows most often as a spiny, scrambling bush or dense climber, hauling itself into the branches of trees and shrubs. It also grows on the tops of anthills, making a solid, tidy crown and occurs in the semi-arid and humid lowland and highland woodlands, forest edges and scrub. May become a weed if not adequately controlled.
Native range
Botswana, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland
Tree management
Lopping is a suitable silvicultural practice.
The species grows from Natal, Swaziland, Transkei, Zululand, and eastern and northern Transvaal, westward across Botswana into northern Namibia, and northwards into tropical Africa. It occurs in coastal bush, forests, riverbanks, mountain slopes, evergreen forests, hot and dry thornveld, and in arid sandy plains. It grows most often as a spiny, scrambling bush or dense climber, hauling itself into the branches of trees and shrubs. It also grows on the tops of anthills, making a solid, tidy crown and occurs in the semi-arid and humid lowland and highland woodlands, forest edges and scrub. May become a weed if not adequately controlled.
Artificial regeneration is by seedlings and cuttings.
Poison: Roots of the species are very poisonous.
Fruits are edible and are popular with African children.
Leaves, although browsed by cattle, kudus and rhino, are believed to be poisonous.
C. tomentosa is suitable for firewood.
Medicine: The Zulus of South Africa use it to cure madness, snakebite, headache, impotence and sterility (in women). It is also used to treat fever; mixed with dried hyena and antelope blood and ox fat, it is used in the ritual treatment of pneumonia. A decoction of the leaves is used for the treatment of asthma; a decoction prepared by scraping the bark and mixing it with goat soup is drunk for chest pains. Decoction of the root is a cough remedy, but it must be used with care, as it is highly poisonous when taken in large quantities.
Trees are grown as a live fence.