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The Fever Forest IMG_5268, Captured In Pafuri, In The, Kruger National Park, South Africa Stock Photography


The Fever Forest IMG_5268, captured in Pafuri, in the, Kruger National Park, South Africa Stock Photo
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The Fever Forest IMG_5268, captured in Pafuri, in the, Kruger National Park, South Africa #206845820
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This image :IMG_5268,of the Fever Tree Forest neer Pafuri in the Kruger National Park, South Africa was captured on 03.09.18 ` Vachellia xanthophloea is a tree in the family Fabaceae, commonly known in English as the fever tree.[2] This species of Vachellia is native to eastern and southern Africa Botswana, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Somalia, South Africa, Eswatini, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe. It has also become a landscape tree in other warm climates, outside of its natural range. Height 15-25m. The characteristic bark is smooth, powdery and greenish yellow, although new twigs are purple, flaking later to reveal the characteristic yellow.[3] It is one of the few trees where photosynthesis takes place in the bark. Straight, white spines grow from the branch nodes in pairs. The leaves are twice compound, with small leaflets 8 mm × 2 mm 0.3 in × 0.1 in. The flowers are produced in scented pale cream spherical inflorescences, clustered at the nodes and towards the ends of the branches. The pale brown pods contain 5-10 elliptical, flattened green seeds and are 5–19 cm 2.0–7.5 in long, straight, flat and rather papery, the segments are mostly longer than they are wide, often breaking up to form small clusters of segments each containing an individual seed. As the pods mature they change colour from green to pale greyish brown.[3] 49-82ft` info: www.wikipedia.org