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Alien Invader Plants
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Botanical name: Cestrum laevigatum
Potato family (Solanaceae)
English: Inkberry
Afrikaans: Inkbessie
Zulu: ink, uyinki

 


CATEGORY:
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CONTROL:
Manual: Easily controlled by uprooting young plants and pulling out seedlings.
Chemical: Basal Stem: use GarlonŽ 4 100ml/10l diesel.  Cut Stump: use GarlonŽ 4 100ml/10l diesel or ChopperŽ 200ml/10l water.

DESCRIPTION: Leaves and stems bruise easily giving off an unpleasant odour; leaves shiny and usually concentrated towards the tips of the branches; light green or creamy-yellow tubular flowers in small groups; fruits purplish-black, oval and fleshy; branches from the base to form a multi-stemmed evergreen shrub or small tree usually 1-2 m but can grow up to 15 m tall on the coast. Flowering time: March to June, fruiting in winter.

ORIGIN: Introduced from Brazil as a hedge plant or windbreak.

WHERE FOUND/PROBLEMS CAUSED: Occurs mainly along the coast but also inland as far as Howick.  In drier areas it usually grows near streams and rivers. Competes with and, under optimum conditions, can completely replace indigenous plant communities; Fruit, leaves and stems are extremely poisonous and especially in June and July when fruits are green causes Chase Valley disease in cattle, which results in heavy stock losses.

DID YOU KNOW: Toxins concentrated in the young leafy shoots cause stock poisoning and the freshly formed green berries especially in spring.  Animals that have eaten large quantities of cestrum usually die suddenly without showing any symptoms.  Cestrum is also known as inkberry but is not to be confused with another plant (Phytolacca octandra) known by the same common name.

Indigenous alternatives

Rhino-coffee Kraussia floribunda
Poison Olive Peddieu africana
Black Bird-berry Psychotria capensis

This page was last edited on 23 April, 2006