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Global Regional Plant Guides

East African Savanna & Acacia Bushland Plant Survival Guide

A comprehensive survival plant guide for East African Savanna & Acacia Bushland, covering useful woody materials, land foods, aquatic foods, traditional-use plants and poisonous look-alikes.

Cover of East African Savanna & Acacia Bushland Plant Survival Guide
Continent
Africa
USDA-equivalent zones
10-13
Köppen climate
Aw / BSh
Profiles
20
Regional biome
Acacia-Commiphora bushland, grass savanna and seasonal river
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Useful plants · 5Land edibles · 5Aquatic edibles · 3Traditional-use · 3Poisonous look-alikes · 4

Useful plants

Wood, fibre, shelter and craft

Arid acacias

Vachellia / Senegalia spp.

Useful plants
Stylized form diagram for Arid acacias
Identify
Feathery compound leaves; paired or hooked thorns; yellow or white puffball flowers; pods.
Habitat
African, Arabian and Australian savannas, dry rivers and deserts.
Season
Wood year-round; gum and pods seasonal.
Field use
Dense wood for bows, handles, stakes and hot coals; gums of selected species have documented food or adhesive use.
Caution
Species vary in cyanogenic chemistry and pod edibility. Thorns cause deep punctures.
Look-alikes
Prosopis/mesquite and other mimosoid legumes require pod and thorn comparison.
bow woodhandlesfueladhesive

Wild raisins / Grewia

Grewia spp.

Useful plants
Stylized form diagram for Wild raisins / Grewia
Identify
Rough toothed leaves; small star-like flowers; lobed orange, red or brown drupes.
Habitat
African savanna, dry woodland and scrub.
Season
Fruit seasonal; stems year-round.
Field use
Ripe fruits of selected species are documented food; straight stems provide arrow shafts, bows, cordage bark and tool handles.
Caution
Species vary. Confirm fruit and leaf traits; thorny thickets can conceal snakes.
Look-alikes
Ziziphus has paired thorns and three-veined leaves.
food fruitarrow shaftbow woodcordage

African baobab

Adansonia digitata

Useful plants
Stylized form diagram for African baobab
Identify
Massive bottle-shaped trunk; palmate leaves; large hanging velvety fruits with dry powdery pulp.
Habitat
African savanna, dry woodland and village parkland.
Season
Fruit dry season; leaves wet season; fiber year-round.
Field use
Fruit pulp and young leaves are documented food; bark fiber has cordage use; hollow or fallen wood can support containers and tinder.
Caution
Do not strip living bark without local authority. Seeds and leaves require normal food preparation.
Look-alikes
Other baobab species occur in Madagascar and Australia.
food fruitfood greencordagecontainer

Marula

Sclerocarya birrea

Useful plants
Stylized form diagram for Marula
Identify
Compound leaves clustered near twig tips; gray mottled bark; plum-sized yellow fruit with hard stone.
Habitat
African savanna and dry woodland.
Season
Fruit wet-season to late summer depending region.
Field use
Ripe fruit and seed kernels are documented food; wood carves easily for bowls and tools.
Caution
Fermenting fallen fruit attracts animals and insects. Kernel extraction needs tools and nut allergy applies.
Look-alikes
Searsia species have smaller clustered fruits and often three leaflets.
food fruitfood nutcarving

Jujubes

Ziziphus spp.

Useful plants
Stylized form diagram for Jujubes
Identify
Zigzag twigs with paired straight and hooked thorns; three-veined leaves; small drupes.
Habitat
Dry Africa, Asia and Mediterranean-type scrub.
Season
Fruit summer-fall; wood year-round.
Field use
Ripe fruits of confirmed species are documented food; hard wood makes tool handles, pegs and small bows.
Caution
Unripe fruit can be astringent; thorn injuries are common. Species vary.
Look-alikes
Christ’s-thorn and buffalo-thorn relatives require local confirmation.
food fruitbow woodhandlespegs

Land edibles

Terrestrial food species

Tamarind

Tamarindus indica

Land-based edible plants
Stylized form diagram for Tamarind
Identify
Fine paired leaflets; brown brittle pods containing sticky sour pulp and hard seeds.
Habitat
African and Asian dry tropics, river valleys and old settlements.
Season
Pods dry season; wood year-round.
Field use
Pod pulp is documented food and drink flavoring; dense wood makes handles and fuel.
Caution
Seeds are extremely hard; avoid moldy pods. Acidic pulp can worsen reflux.
Look-alikes
Cassia pods and leaves differ; tamarind pods are brittle and pulp sticky.
food podhandlesfuel

Monkey oranges

Strychnos cocculoides / S. spinosa

Land-based edible plants
Stylized form diagram for Monkey oranges
Identify
Opposite leaves with strong curved veins; hard round yellow-orange fruit with many seeds in pulp.
Habitat
African savanna and dry woodland.
Season
Fruit dry to early wet season.
Field use
Fully ripe fruit of confirmed edible species is documented food; hard wood can make pegs and tools.
Caution
The genus includes highly toxic species. Never generalize from fruit shape or name.
Look-alikes
Toxic Strychnos species can look similar without expert regional knowledge.
food fruitpegs

Common purslane

Portulaca oleracea

Land-based edible plants
Stylized form diagram for Common purslane
Identify
Low reddish succulent stems; smooth fleshy leaves; tiny yellow flowers; clear sap.
Habitat
Disturbed warm ground, gardens, river deposits and camp edges worldwide.
Season
Warm growing season.
Field use
Young leaves and stems are documented food and water-rich greens.
Caution
High oxalate content; avoid large amounts with kidney disease and avoid contaminated ground.
Look-alikes
Spurges often exude milky sap and are unsafe.
food green

Prickly pears

Opuntia spp.

Land-based edible plants
Stylized form diagram for Prickly pears
Identify
Flattened pads with clusters of fine glochids and often spines; showy flowers; fleshy fruits.
Habitat
Dry Americas, disturbed warm regions and some Mediterranean/African landscapes.
Season
Fruit summer-fall; young pads seasonal.
Field use
Ripe fruit and properly de-spined young pads of confirmed species are documented foods; dry woody joints can support fuel.
Caution
Invisible glochids embed in skin, eyes and mouth. Some fruits are insipid or seedy; avoid sprayed invasive stands.
Look-alikes
Chollas have cylindrical joints.
food fruitfood padfuel

Moringa

Moringa oleifera

Land-based edible plants
Stylized form diagram for Moringa
Identify
Triply compound leaves; white fragrant flowers; long slender three-angled pods; soft pale wood.
Habitat
Tropical dry regions, villages and disturbed ground.
Season
Leaves much of year; pods seasonal.
Field use
Young leaves and pods are documented foods after cooking; seeds have limited water-clarification use in controlled settings.
Caution
Seeds do not disinfect water and can add organic matter. Roots and concentrated medicinal use are unsafe.
Look-alikes
Senna and other compound-leaved trees lack the long three-angled pods.
food greenfood podwater clarification

Aquatic edibles

Water-margin food species

Cattails

Typha spp.

Water and wetland edible plants
Stylized form diagram for Cattails
Identify
Tall flat strap leaves; dense brown cylindrical female flower spike below a narrower male section.
Habitat
Marshes, pond edges, slow channels and wet ditches.
Season
Shoots spring; pollen early summer; rhizomes year-round where lawful.
Field use
Documented food parts include young inner shoots, pollen and processed rhizome starch. Leaves make mats, baskets and thatch; seed down can bulk tinder.
Caution
Water can concentrate sewage, metals and parasites. Raw rhizome requires correct processing; avoid contaminated marshes.
Look-alikes
Yellow flag iris has sword leaves and showy flowers but no brown cattail head.
food shootfood starchbasketrythatchtinder

Papyrus

Cyperus papyrus

Water and wetland edible plants
Stylized form diagram for Papyrus
Identify
Tall triangular stems topped by a large umbrella of fine rays; leafless lower stem.
Habitat
African tropical swamps, lake margins and slow rivers.
Season
Stems year-round; young pith seasonal.
Field use
Stems make mats, floats, boats, cordage and shelter panels; tender pith has documented food use.
Caution
Water quality, crocodiles and deep mud are major risks. Other sedges are difficult to identify.
Look-alikes
Bulrush flower clusters are compact rather than a large umbrella.
floatboatbasketrycordagefood shoot

African water lilies

Nymphaea lotus / N. nouchali group

Water and wetland edible plants
Stylized form diagram for African water lilies
Identify
Round floating leaves with a slit; showy white, blue or pink flowers; seeds and rhizomes.
Habitat
Warm African lakes, floodplains and slow rivers.
Season
Flowers and seeds seasonal; rhizomes year-round.
Field use
Seeds and rhizomes of selected species have documented food use after processing.
Caution
Raw tissues can be bitter or irritating; avoid polluted or crocodile habitat.
Look-alikes
Aquatic aroids have arrow leaves and a spadix.
food seedfood starch

Traditional-use

Documented traditional medicine

African aloes

Aloe spp.

Medicinal and traditional-use plants
Stylized form diagram for African aloes
Identify
Fleshy rosette leaves with toothed margins and spikes of tubular red, orange or yellow flowers.
Habitat
African drylands, rocky slopes and fynbos.
Season
Leaves year-round; flowers seasonal.
Field use
Clear inner gel of a few correctly identified species has documented external soothing use; dry stalks are tinder.
Caution
Yellow latex under the rind is a strong laxative and can be dangerous. Species vary; do not eat aloe in the field.
Look-alikes
Agaves are New World plants with fibrous leaves and different flowers.
medicinetinder

African wormwood

Artemisia afra

Medicinal and traditional-use plants
Stylized form diagram for African wormwood
Identify
Gray-green aromatic finely divided leaves; small inconspicuous flower heads; woody base.
Habitat
African highlands, grassland and disturbed mountain slopes.
Season
Growing season.
Field use
Widely documented traditional aromatic and respiratory use; dry stems support tinder.
Caution
No survival dosing. Concentrated oils and teas can be toxic, especially in pregnancy or seizure disorders.
Look-alikes
Other Artemisia species and unrelated gray shrubs resemble it.
medicinetinder

Pepper-bark tree

Warburgia salutaris

Medicinal and traditional-use plants
Stylized form diagram for Pepper-bark tree
Identify
Aromatic glossy leaves with pale undersides; rough bark; small green flowers and berries.
Habitat
Southern and East African forest margins.
Season
Leaves year-round.
Field use
Documented traditional medicinal plant and useful aromatic wood.
Caution
Critically overharvested in parts of its range. Do not strip bark or self-dose.
Look-alikes
Other aromatic trees require flower and bark confirmation.
medicinetools

Poisonous look-alikes

Do not eat — verify before harvest

Bushman’s poison

Acokanthera spp.

Poisonous plants
Stylized form diagram for Bushman’s poison
Identify
Evergreen shrub or tree with opposite leathery leaves, fragrant white-pink flowers and plum-like dark fruits.
Habitat
African dry woodland, savanna and forest edge.
Season
Year-round foliage; fruit seasonal.
Field use
No food use. Historically used as arrow poison.
Caution
Contains potent cardiac glycosides; wood, sap, fruit and smoke can be dangerous.
Look-alikes
Wild olives have narrower silvery leaves and no milky poisonous sap.
poison

Desert rose

Adenium obesum

Poisonous plants
Stylized form diagram for Desert rose
Identify
Swollen succulent trunk, leathery leaves near branch tips and large pink-red trumpet flowers; milky sap.
Habitat
East African and Arabian dry bushland and rocky slopes.
Season
Year-round stems; flowers seasonal.
Field use
No food use.
Caution
Milky sap contains cardiac glycosides and has been used as arrow poison. Avoid skin, eye and wound contact.
Look-alikes
Plumeria has milky sap and flowers but lacks the swollen caudex.
poison

Tree euphorbias

Euphorbia spp.

Poisonous plants
Stylized form diagram for Tree euphorbias
Identify
Candelabra or shrub form; milky latex; paired spines in many species; tiny flowers in specialized cups.
Habitat
African drylands, tropical scrub and disturbed ground.
Season
Year-round.
Field use
No food use; dry dead wood is not recommended for cooking fires.
Caution
Latex can cause severe burns, blindness and vomiting; smoke is irritating.
Look-alikes
Cacti lack milky latex and are native to the Americas.
poison

Castor bean

Ricinus communis

Poisonous plants
Stylized form diagram for Castor bean
Identify
Large star-shaped palmately lobed leaves; spiny capsules; glossy mottled seeds.
Habitat
Warm disturbed ground, riverbanks and tropical/subtropical waste areas.
Season
Growing season; seeds seasonal.
Field use
No survival food or medicine use. Oil extraction is industrial, not a field process.
Caution
Chewed seeds can release ricin and cause severe or fatal poisoning.
Look-alikes
Jatropha has similar lobed leaves but different fruit; it is also toxic.
poison