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Olea welwitschii is evergreen, and can grow up to 35 meters in height. It is used locally and commercially for timber. Olea welwitschii is sometimes classified ...
Ecology. A tree with attractive timber found in. Angola, Zambia, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Ethiopia from lowland rain forest to upland evergreen forest.
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Olea welwitschii

Olea welwitschii

Olea welwitschii, the Elgon teak, is a species of tree in the family Oleaceae. It ranges across parts of subsaharan Africa, from Cameroon in the west to Ethiopia and Kenya in the east, and south to Angola, Zambia, and Mozambique. Wikipedia
Family: Oleaceae
Low to tall tree, generally 12–24 m. in height, with a straight not much branched trunk and a rather small crown, the final branches terete, grey, ...
The native range of this species is Ethiopia to S. Tropical Africa. It is a tree and grows primarily in the seasonally dry tropical biome.
Scientific name, Olea welwitschii. Synonyms, Elgon Teak / Elgon olive. Native distribution, Sub Saharan Africa. Biology, The tree can reach 25m with a ...
Leaves of mature trees with blades narrowly elliptic to elliptic-lanceolate, acutely acuminate, 6–19 cm. long, 2.3–7.6 cm. broad, coriaceous, nearly or quite ...
Young trees prefer well-drained, deep, loamy and fertile soils. Once established, they are quite drought resistant and they also grow in poor soils.
Notes: East African olive (Olea capensis) is a closely related species that is very similar to O. welwitschii. Generally, the wood is about 20% heavier and the ...
Nov 21, 2019 · It yields a high quality wood, and is a candidate species for plantation forestry programmes. A disadvantage is that it grows best on wet sites.
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