var findit, a, b, d=0;
var limit=2;

var db=new Array (limit);

for (a=0; a<limit; a++)
  {
   db[a]=new Array(13);
  }

db[0][0]="067068069";
db[0][1]="Lonchocarpus nelsii <span class=\"normal\">(Schinz) Heering & Grimme</span>";
db[0][2]="FABACEAE";
db[0][3]="mpanda";
db[0][4]="--";
db[0][5]="Kalahari apple-leaf";
db[0][6]="035.jpg";
db[0][7]="1";
db[0][8]="<b>Foto:</b>&nbsp;<i>Lonchocarpus nelsii subsp. nelsii</i> in full flower, taken in September.";
db[0][9]="Lonchocarpus nelsii <span class=\"normal\">(Schinz) Heering & Grimme subsp. </span>nelsii";
db[0][10]="A small, common tree up to 5m tall, widely distributed on deep sands as well as loamy sands. The leaves are ovate and often velvety to touch. It flowers from September onwards in attractive, pea-shaped, purple panicles. When in full flower, possible for 2 weeks, the crown looks like it has been dipped in pale purple paint. The fruits are small, velvety pods which remain on the tree only for a short time in October. Germination trials at the Forestry Research Station Kanovlei showed a germination rate of 67% with no seed pre-treatment, using seed from 1994 which had been removed from the pod in 1994 and stored.";
db[0][11]="<img src=\"../pics/pl_083.jpg\" width=\"200\" height=\"130\" align=\"left\" vspace=\"3\" alt=\"A sapling of Lonchocarpus nelsii subsp. nelsii.\"><img src=\"../../images/t.gif\" width=\"6\" height=\"130\" align=\"left\" vspace=\"3\"><span class=\"bold\">Use:&nbsp;</span>The wood is a good fuel wood and is used for producing axe shafts. For this coppicing stems are cut and manufactured in such a way that the natural knot between the root and the stem forms that part of the axe where the metal blade is fixed. Some people like to have bigger apple-leaf trees on their fields because they say the leaves have a soil-improving effect. <br><img src=\"../../images/t.gif\" width=\"1\" height=\"6\"><br><img src=\"../pics/pl_036.jpg\" width=\"130\" height=\"200\" align=\"right\" vspace=\"3\" alt=\"Boring larvae under the bark of Lonchocarpus nelsii subsp. nelsii leave a frass that is used to prepare an ointment for treating wounds.\"><img src=\"../../images/t.gif\" width=\"6\" height=\"200\" align=\"right\" vspace=\"3\"><span class=\"bold\">Medical use:&nbsp;</span>The frass of a larvae called &quot;madj'anna&quot; in Vasekele are used for treating suppurating skin inflammations. Children especially often seem to have these skin inflammations, mainly occurring on the skin of the head but also on other parts of the body. The larvae feeds on the bark of different trees, but only the frass found on Lonchocarpus nelsii can be used for treatment. The frass is burnt and the resulting ash is then mixed with Vaseline. This ointment is applied to the wounds several times a day as necessary until the inflammation is totally healed.";
db[0][12]="Giess p.308, v.Koenen p.139, Palgrave p.327, Saar p.30.";

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