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20 HURRICANE RESISTANT TREES FOR ROADSIDE PLANTING
Generally, native, endemic and some
Caribbean
trees are the best, since they, over thousands of years, adapted
to hurricanes. So,
DO NOT
plant Pine, Eucalyptus, Yellow Poui, Jacaranda, African Tulip
Tree, Leuceana or Mango. Fruit trees, for various reasons, are
not suited for roadsides. The good ones are:
-
West
Indian Mahogany* !
[NOT Honduras Mahogany and NOT hybrids of the two!
Genetically clean trees are at King’s House, Tulloch Estates,
Bermuda Mount for seed collection. If you go to Forestry
Department, make sure you get the native (W.I.) Mahogany and ask
for seed source.
-
West
Indian Cedar*
-
Blue
Mahoe*
-
Santa Maria*
-
Spanish Elm*
-
Bitter Damsel*
-
White Cedar
(White Poui)*
-
French Oak
(Yoke Wood)*
-
Red
Birch
(Bird feeder)
-
Burn
Wood
(Bird feeder)
-
Lignum Vitae
(for
dual carriage median and urban use)*
-
Stinking Toe
-
Cuban Royal Palm
(used to be in
Portland,
Port Antonio,
Buff
Bay)
-
Jamaican Royal Palm
(Swamp Cabbage, for wet lowland areas, Negril,
Black
River
etc.)
-
Bull
Thatch Palm
(commonly used in DR, even the capital)
-
Sea
Grappe
-
Seaside
Mahoe
-
Red
Cordia
-
Black Olive
-
Tecoma, Yellow Elder
(for
dual carriage median)
* are
usually available at Forestry Department; most others are easily
grown from seed (Red Birch from cuttings).
Do not remove mature trees, palms from the wild!
Source:
Andreas Oberlie
Director, Plant Conservation Centre
PO Box
274, Kingston 6
Jamaica West Indies
Tel.
(876)944-8366
Email.
naf-hope@cwjamaica.com
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