Aningeria adolfi-friederici is a large forest tree growing to a height of up to 50 m (164 ft). It has a straight cylindrical trunk, without branches on its lower half, that can be up to 150 cm (5 ft) in diameter. The trunk is often fluted and may have large buttresses at its base.[7]
Ecology
Aningeria adolfi-friederici is a typical climax species of mature forest; it has a small crown which is higher than the surrounding canopy. It has large seeds which are viable for only a short time. They germinate freely, and the saplings are slow-growing but thrive in dense shade. It is plentiful in the understory layer but may be more scarce in the upper layers, particularly where the best trees in the forest have been selectively felled.[8] In Kenya, it grows in lowland and montane dry evergreen forest habitats in the company of Suregada procera and Afrocarpus gracilior.[9] It is a mycorrhizal species, the roots forming a symbiotic association with a fungus.[7]
Aningeria adolfi-friederici subsp. adolfi-friederici – southwestern Ethiopia to eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo
Aningeria adolfi-friederici subsp. australisJ.H.Hemsl. – Tanzania, Malawi, Zambia, and Zimbabwe
Aningeria adolfi-friederici subsp. floccosaJ.H.Hemsl. – northeastern Tanzania
Aningeria adolfi-friederici subsp. keniensis(R.E.Fr.) J.H.Hemsl. – Kenya and northern Tanzania
Aningeria adolfi-friederici subsp. usambarensisJ.H.Hemsl. – northeastern Tanzania
Uses
The heartwood is greyish-brown, and not clearly distinguishable from the sapwood. The timber is not very durable and is susceptible to attack by termites, fungi and boring insects. It is used to make furniture, and is also used for light construction work, flooring, joinery, cabinet work, boats, boxes, crates, veneers and plywood. It makes good firewood and is used to make charcoal.[7]
The tree is used to provide shade in plantations, and can be pollarded and coppiced. The greenish flesh of the fruits can be eaten raw, and an edible oil can be extracted from the seeds. In traditional medicine, the tree's bark has been used to treat stomach problems and the fruit, to expel tape worms, but when used for this purpose it is rather slow-acting and moderately toxic.[7]