Introduction
General Distribution:
General Information about the Tree:
Biophysical Limits:
It grows well at altitudes of 0-1,600 m, in full sunlight and in well drained neutral or calcareous soil. It does not tolerate acidic soils and needs more than 600 mm rainfall. It does well in agro-ecological zones II-V.
Propagation and Tree Management
Products:
- Food: Pods, seeds and leaf tips have been used as food, although mimosine toxicity makes this practice risky.
- Fodder: is one of the high quality and most palatable fodder trees of the tropics being equaled to the "alfalfa of the tropics".
- Apiculture: is in bloom almost throughout the year, providing constant forage to honey bees.
- Fuel: is an excellent firewood species
- Other products: poles, medicine (roots), mulch, tannin and dye
Services:
- Erosion control: An aggressive taproot system helps in reducing the run-off.
- Shade or shelter: is often is used as a shade tree for cocoa, coffee and tea; it generally acts as a shelterbelt, providing shade and wind protection for a variety of crops, especially during early growth.
- Reclamation: L. leucocephala thrives on steep slopes and in marginal areas with extended dry seasons, making it a prime candidate for restoring forest cover, watersheds and grasslands.
- Nitrogen fixing: It has high nitrogen-fixing potential due to its abundant root nodulation.
- Soil improver: it is also used for the production of green manure in alley cropping
- Ornamental: it is suitable as an ornamental and roadside landscaping tree species.
- Boundary or barrier or support: it is used as a live fence, firebreak and live support for vines such as pepper, coffee and cocoa, vanilla, yam and passion fruit.
- Intercropping: is one of the most widely used species in alley cropping, where it is planted in hedges along contours with crops in between.
Pests and Diseases
A psyllid insect pest, Heteropsylla cubana, causes defoliation. In Kenya, the psyllid defoliates the leucaena, resulting in severely reduced production of fodder as well as wood, but without killing the leucaena but it has caused serious defoliation and mortality in eastern Africa. A Caribbean parasitoid, Psyllaephagus, shows specificity and excellent appetite for H. cubana and hence offers possibilities for biological control.
Some varieties of lusina are susceptible to gummosis, most likely caused by Fusarium semitectum. Ganoderma lucidum is said to cause root rot in arid and semi-arid regions and Leaf-spot fungus can cause defoliation under wet conditions. Wild animals avidly consume seedlings.
Information Source Links
- Maundu P. and Bo Tengnas. (2005). Useful trees and shrubs for Kenya, World Agroforestry Centre. ISBN-9966-896-70-8.
- www.worldagroforestry.org