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db[0][0]="083084085";
db[0][1]="Pterocarpus angolensis <span class=\"normal\">DC.</span>";
db[0][2]="FABACEAE";
db[0][3]="n#hng";
db[0][4]="n#hng";
db[0][5]="Kiaat, African teak";
db[0][6]="043.jpg";
db[0][7]="0";
db[0][8]="<b>Foto:</b>&nbsp;A flowering <i>Pterocarpus angolensis</i> tree, taken in September.";
db[0][9]="";
db[0][10]="A common tree up to 10m in height which grows on different kinds of deep sand. The leaves have 5 to 9 pairs of  obovate leaflets, intensive green in colour. The flowers appear before the leaves from September to October in attractive, yellow panicles, one single flower being similar to a pea flower. The fruit is unique; in the middle, it forms a circular, ball shaped case covered with harsh bristles, which contains one single, brown kidney shaped seed. The case is surrounded by a thin, also circular wing. They often remain on the tree after the leaves fall off in winter. The wood is two-coloured, the softer sapwood being yellowish and the hard heartwood reddish-brown. <br><img src=\"../../images/t.gif\" width=\"1\" height=\"3\">It is the only commercially harvested wood in Bushmanland and therefore an important tree, but it is doubtful whether the harvesting is sustainable. Results from an inventory undertaken in 1996/97 by the Directorate of Forestry (under guidance by the Finish Development Agency) showed that there is almost no natural regeneration and that most younger classes are absent totally. In addition, germination results and survival rates of planted seedlings are not very good. Best germination results were achieved by sowing early September, 1996 with 37% germination rate from 1996 seeds and 34% from 1995 seeds. The seeds only had been removed from the seed case and no seed pre-treatment was tested. <br><img src=\"../../images/t.gif\" width=\"1\" height=\"3\">An informal trial of the root development showed that within 100 days of germination, the roots of a seedling can be up to 1m deep already. This may partly explain the bad survival rates of planted seedlings. In 20cm deep planting bags, first root deformations will have taken place within the first 4 to 6 weeks. It is necessary to test further direct sowing techniques with selected and performance tested seed.";
db[0][11]="<img src=\"../pics/pl_089.jpg\" width=\"200\" height=\"130\" align=\"left\" vspace=\"3\" alt=\"A sapling of Pterocarpus angolensis.\"><img src=\"../../images/t.gif\" width=\"6\" height=\"130\" align=\"left\" vspace=\"3\"><span class=\"bold\">Use:&nbsp;</span>This valuable wood is used for making all kind of furniture, e.g. chairs, beds, tables and for crafts and carvings. The reddish-brown heartwood is the best quality, but with combinations of the yellowish sapwood and the dark heartwood, attractive design can also be achieved. <br><img src=\"../../images/t.gif\" width=\"1\" height=\"6\"><br><span class=\"bold\">Medical use:&nbsp;</span>When the tree is cut or the bark is injured, a dark red, sticky sap exudes from the wounds, which resembles human blood weeping from a wound. This sap is dried, pounded and mixed with oil to make an ointment. This ointment is applied to the whole body for skin care by old women. The red sap is also used to treat severe coughs. A young tree is cut and the fresh red sap is applied in a line downwards from the armpits on both sides of the body. Then a little bit of the fresh sap is eaten. A decoction is then prepared of either the bark or the roots and drunk. This remedy is used for children as well.";
db[0][12]="Giess p.322, v.Koenen p.162, Palgrave p.321, Le Roux p.77.";

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