Dioscorea elephantipes
Dioscorea elephantipes, the elephant's foot yam or Hottentot bread, is a species of flowering plant in the genus Dioscorea of the family Dioscoreaceae, native to the dry interior of South Africa.
Description
It is a deciduous climber. It takes the name "elephant's foot" from the appearance of its large, partially buried, tuberous stem or caudex, which grows very slowly but often reaches a considerable size, often more than in circumference with a height of nearly above ground. This tuber can weigh as much as 365 kg. It is rich in starch, whence the name Hottentot bread, and is covered on the outside with thick, hard, corky plates.Primarily a winter grower, it develops slender, leafy, climbing shoots with dark-spotted, greenish-yellow flowers in winter The flowers are dioecious, with male or female flowers occurring on separate plants.
Distribution
Its natural habitat is the arid inland regions of the Cape, stretching from the centre of the Northern Cape, south to the Clanwilliam & Cederberg area, and eastwards through the districts of Graaff Reinet, Uniondale and Willowmore, as far as Grahamstown.It was recently rediscovered in a section of the Northern Cape Province by an expedition collecting seeds for the Millennium Seed Bank Project.
In this area, it is most common on rocky north & east-facing slopes, in quartz or shale based soils.
Cultivation
This species is not difficult to cultivate, however it requires extremely coarse, well-drained soil, and sparse watering. Importantly, it is deciduous and loses its leaves in the summer. At this time it goes through a dry dormancy period. It has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.Watering
This species indicates when it is requiring water, by the presence of green growth. From when a new growth appears from the thick stem, it can receive regular watering, up until the growth withers and dies back. This is when the plant goes into its summer dormancy. Then watering should become more rare – until the next new growth appears.The cycle can be extremely unpredictable or erratic, but in most cases this results in a watering regime of wetter winter and spring, and a dry summer dormancy period.