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Sesbania sesban
Sesbania sesban
Scientific name:
Sesbania sesban
Family:
Fabaceae
Local names:
English River Bean or Egyptian rattle pod
Kenya: Daisa (Boran), Kinuka muhondo (Giriama), Munyongo (Kamba), Natiantia (Keiyo), Mwethia (Kikuyu), Omosabisabi (Kisii), Chisubasubi (Luhya or Bukusu), Kumusubasubi or Lukhule (Luhya), Oyieko or Siaya or Sawo sawo (Luo), Oloiyangalni (Maasai), Walbaiyondet (Nandi), Loiyangalani (Samburu),
Ethiopia:Girangire (Amargna), Enchini or Harcha (Oromugna), Rakile lo'od or Get beyo (Sidamigna), Tetem agazen or Shashata (Tigrigna)
Distribution
Geographical distribution
Geographical Distribution of the River Bean (red marked)
Distribution of Sesbania sesban in Kenya
© Maundu P. and Bo Tengnas. (2005). Useful trees and shrubs for Kenya, World Agroforestry Centre.
One of many useful African Sesbania more species of the type which survive waterlogging and fix nitrogen. Naturally distributed from Senegal to Somalia and South Africa. Cultivated throughout tropical Africa and Asia. It is found at the margin of fresh-water lakes and seasonal ponds. Some types tolerate acid and saline soild. Easy to establish even in waterlogged soil and dry eroded soil. In Ethiopia, it performs well in Moist and Wet Bereha, Kolla and Weyna Dega agroclimatic zones of Afar plains and in nearly all ohter regions, 300 - 2000 m. Widely used in western Kenya, it is distributed in the country as above;



General Information about the Tree:
This tree has a great potential for soil improvement on small farms due to nitrogen fixation and leaf mulch.


Biophysical Limits:
Altitude ranges from 100 to 2300 m, Mean annual temperatures (10 degrees on the lower side and 45 degrees on the upper side, Mean annual rainfall: 500-2000 mm, Soil type: It is capable of putting up with seasonal or permanently waterlogged soils as well as saline, acidic and alkaline soils. It is common along rivers and in Kenya, is found on the shores of fresh water lakes like Naivasha and Baringo and in seasonal swamps. It is widely cultivated in western Kenya and does well in agro-ecological zones I - IV
Description

A deciduous, short-lived shrub or tree to 8 m.

Bark: Red-brown, young shoots hairy.

Leaves: Compund to 12 cm long, 12 - 25 pairs of leaflets, each leaflet to 2 cm oblong, tip notched, narrow.

Flowers: Pale yellow, speckled maroon, in few-flowered sprays to 15 cm long.

Fruit: Abundant bunches of think pale brown pods to 20 cm, with separated sections so seeds rattle within.

Sesbania sesban
© P. Maundu and B. Tengnäs, World Agroforestry Centre
Uses and Propagation

Uses:
Firewood, poles, medicine (ground leaves), fodder (leaves), shade (young coffee), mulch, nitrogen fixation, soil improvement, soil conservation, fibres (young stems), soap (leaves).

Propagation and Tree Management:
Propagation may be done by direct sowing at site or wilding. One of the major advantages of sesbania over other forage trees and shrubs is its fast early growth rate, which can be exploited by intercropping it with other slower establishing species for earlier yields. This tree species has been reported to attain a height of 4-5 m in 6 months. It also does well under repeated cuttings and coppices readily, with many branches arising from the main stem below cutting height. Cutting frequencies are generally 3-4 cuts per year, but up to 8 cuts are made in some areas. Yields also vary from 4 to 12 t/ha dry matter per year, depending on location of cultivation. Cutting height can also determine yield, with cutting heights of 50-76 cm being good for plant survival and productivity.
Seed storage behaviour is customary and their viability can be maintained for 2 years in open storage at room temperature. The Sesbania species may occur in dense stands; agroforestry (mixed farming system); and conservation. Pruning and short rotation is employed in their management for optimum productivity.


Products:
  • Food: Flowers of this tree are edible and are included perhaps as a decorative or festive ingredient in foods such as the omelettes.
  • Fodder: It has a high percentage of foliage nitrogen and is an excellent supplement to protein-poor roughage in ruminant diets. The ruminants readily eat leaves and young branches
  • Fuel: This tree is popular for firewood and charcoal because it has a high woody biomass, which, although soft, is relatively smokeless, quick kindling and hot burning.
  • Fibre: it is used for making ropes and fishnet and has potential for pulpwood production.
  • Soap: its leaves can be used in soap making.
  • Gum or resin: Seeds and bark produce gum which can be economically exploited.
  • Poison: Saponin, stigmasta-galactopyranoside, which can be isolated from the seeds, has glucuronide derivatives of oleanolic acid, which has molluscicidal activity against Biophalaria glabrata, one of the known snail vectors of schistosomiasis.
  • Medicine: Fresh roots and leaves are used to treat scorpion stings, boils and abscesses. The decoctions of leaves can be used as a drench for cattle to repel tsetse fly. It is also used to treat sore throat, gonorrhoea, syphilis, spasmodic fits in children and jaundice during pregnancy among some communities. The leaves can also be used in some countries as a tea and are considered to have antibiotic, anthelmintic, antitumour and contraceptive properties. Oil from the seeds is accorded special properties too.


Services:
  • Shade or shelter: It has been used to shade coffee, tea and cocoa. It has also been used as a windbreak for bananas, citrus and coffee preventing them from destruction.
  • Soil fertility: It can increase soil nitrogen through symbiotic interaction with bacteria; has the ability to stabilize soil, and in some parts it has been used as green manure for rice. The branches have been used as mulch and leaves as a green manure.
  • Intercropping: It is a promising shrub for alley cropping because is established easily, it grows rapidly, coppices readily and provides mulch of high nutrient content. In some climates, such as in the Kenyan highlands, it may have a sparse canopy, and weed competition can be a problem. This characteristic makes it a good intercrop.
  • Shade: the tree provides shade to both livestock and humans in hot weather.
  • Boundary or barrier or support: It can be suitable for use as live trellises for pepper.



Seed:
The species is a prolific seeder with a high germination rate. About 110'000 seed per kg. Germination about 80%.

Treatment: Not necessary for fresh seed, soak stored seed in cold or tepid water for 24 hours before sowing.

Storage: Seed can be stored for long periods if kept in a cool and dry place, but best germination from fresh seed.


Sesbania sesban fruits
© Patrick Maundu, World Agroforestry Centre


Remarks:
The species may harbour root-knot nematodes. The genetic diversity of Sesbania types allows for selection (e.g. for different uses, management, soil types). The leaf mulch and nitrogen-fixation features make this a tree of great potential for intercropping and thereby soil improvement on small farms.


Pests and Diseases
It is susceptible to attacks by nematode, insect, fungi and virus. The leaf-eating beetle Mesoplatys ochroptera can completely defoliate this tree killing it. It can also be attacked by caterpillars, hymenoptera, and stem borers. Some potentially destructive root-knot nematodes have also been recorded as associated with this tree.
Due to their ability to harbor rootknot nematodes, they should be avoided in combination with crops that are very sensitive to nematodes like banana & Irish potatoes.
Information Source Links
  • Bekele-Tesemma, B. (2007). Useful trees and shrubs for Ethiopia. World Agroforestry Centre, Nairobi, Kenya. ISBN 92-9059-2125
    www.worldagroforestry.org
  • Maundu, P. and Tengnäs, B. (2005). Useful trees and shrubs for Kenya. World Agroforestry Centre. ISBN: 9966-896-70-8
    www.worldagroforestry.org
  • Heering, J.H. and Gutteridge, R.C. (1992) Sesbania sesban (L.) Merrill. In:'t Mannetje, L. and Jones, R.M. (eds) Plant Resources of South-East Asia No. 4. Forages. pp. 198-200. (Pudoc Scientific Publishers, Wageningen, the Netherlands
  • www.worldagroforestrycentre.org
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