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Bwa-yo - Société Audubon Haiti

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14 Kasya<br />

Species: Senna siamea (Lam.) Irwin & Barneby<br />

Synonyms: Cassia arborea Macfad., C. florida Vahl, C. gigantea Bertero, C. siamea<br />

Lam., Sciacassia siamea (Lam.) Britton<br />

Family: Fabaceae (=Leguminosae) Subfamily: Caesalpinioideae<br />

Common Names: H - casse de Siam, cassia (kasya); RD - acacia amarilla, casia de<br />

Siam, flamboyan amarillo, la casia amarilla; C, PR - casia, casia siamea; J, PR,US ­<br />

kassod-tree, Siamese senna, Siamese shower.<br />

Importance: There are several reasons that Senna siameabecame one ofthe most popular<br />

species ofthe <strong>Haiti</strong>an farmer. It grows fast on a wide range ofsites to provide quick<br />

shade and a moderately dense wood for small timber and fuelwood. It coppices well to<br />

yield successive crops. It is not weedy and generally is refused by animals as a browse.<br />

The crown is erect and the seedling is more shade tolerant than most other fast-growing<br />

exotics. It fits well into the traditional lakou system, besides being suitable for<br />

hedgerows, boundary plantings, and woodlots.<br />

Taxonomy and Botanical Features: The species first was described in Thailand, formerly<br />

Siam, as the common and scientific names indicate. A major revision of the<br />

Cassieae tribe distinguishes three closely-related genera (Cassia, Senna and<br />

Chamaecrista) based on the stamen and bract features (Irwin and Barneby, 1982). The<br />

medium-sized tree is recognized by the large terminal clusters ofshowy yellow flowers<br />

and numerous bunches of flat, narrow, slightly curved, dark brown pods which split<br />

open to release more than a dozen shiny, circular, dark brown, flat seeds 8 mm indiameter<br />

(Fig. 14.1 inset). The 6-14 paired leaflets, 3-7.5 cm long and 1.3-2.3 cm wide, are<br />

attached to a reddish tinged axis and have a dark green upper surface and a gray green<br />

lower surface. The flower stalks and new growth have a yellowish tint.<br />

Distribution and Ecology: The natural range of the species is southeast Asia from<br />

southern India to the Malay peninsula. It has been planted throughout the tropics as a<br />

fast-growing reforestation species and the time ofits entry to <strong>Haiti</strong> is uncertain. Little<br />

and Wadsworth (1964) reported the species' introduction to Jamaica prior to 1837.<br />

SHADA planted the species in the Bayeux and Franklin areas in the 1940s. As the<br />

most-planted species during the USAID Agroforestry Outreach Project (1981-1989)<br />

and Agroforestry II (1990-1991), the gene pool, mostly from the Bayeux population,<br />

has been distributed throughout <strong>Haiti</strong>. The main distribution ofthe species still is centered<br />

along travel ways, commonly occurring as a combination ornamental, boundary<br />

planting, and shade tree in the residential sections of small towns. During 1988, additional<br />

seed lots were imported from Central America and Africa and were incorporated<br />

into a program to broaden the genetic base ofthe species and to begin selection ofsuperior<br />

trees.<br />

The tree prefers elevations under 500 m and annual rainfall amounts from<br />

1000-2000 rom. It fails on sites with a combination ofalkaline soils, particularly heavy<br />

clays, and 4-5 months ofdrought with no access to deep soil moisture. It survives poorer<br />

than Leucaena leucocephala ssp. glabrata and Azadirachta indica on shallow and<br />

rocky soils. The tree tolerates the poorly-drained vertisols, but prefers the sandy loams<br />

111

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