Azbubu
Honorary Master
So my parents bought this "cycad" for R80. I was under the impression that you needed a license for a cycad an that cycads cost in the R1000s. So what is this?
South Africa’s biggest forum. Discuss, discover, and connect with thousands of members.
A photo of the foliage doesn't really help need to see body too.
I don't get the whole cycad thing, do most people only want them because most people can't have them. And what if I got one growing natually by it's self in my yard are the cops going come and take it away?
When I moved into my new place, the previous owner removed all his cycads. There was one which he didn't remove but it had this cone growing on it. He removed the cone only and that cycad looks to be dying now. From What I've read, those cones are required for reproduction but are they necessary for the plant to survive?
Why exactly do you need a license?
Extinction
The probable former range of cycads can be inferred from their global distribution. For example, the family Stangeriaceae only contains three extant species in Africa and Australia. Diverse fossils of this family have been dated to 135 mya, indicating that diversity may have been much greater before the Jurassic and late Triassic mass extinction events. However, the cycad fossil record is generally poor and little can be deduced about the effects of each mass extinction event on their diversity.
Instead, correlations can be made between the number of extant gymnosperms and angiosperms. It is likely that cycad diversity was affected more by the great angiosperm radiation in the mid-Cretaceous than by extinctions. Very slow cambial growth was first used to define cycads, and because of this characteristic the group could not compete with the rapidly growing, relatively short-lived angiosperms, which now number over 250,000 species, compared to the 947 remaining gymnosperms. It is surprising that the cycads are still extant, having been faced with extreme competition and five major extinctions. The ability of cycads to survive in relatively dry environments where plant diversity is generally lower, and their great longevity, may explain their long persistence.
When I moved into my new place, the previous owner removed all his cycads. There was one which he didn't remove but it had this cone growing on it. He removed the cone only and that cycad looks to be dying now. From What I've read, those cones are required for reproduction but are they necessary for the plant to survive?