Phylica arborea aka Island Cape Myrtle

Taxonomy ID: 10124

Phylica arborea (Island Cape Myrtle, also called the Island Tree) is a small evergreen tree or shrub in the buckthorn family (Rhamnaceae), and one of the most remarkable trees in the world by virtue of where it grows. It is the only native tree across the entire Tristan da Cunha archipelago and neighbouring Gough Island in the remote South Atlantic, and also forms the last surviving forests of Amsterdam Island (French Southern Territories) in the southern Indian Ocean — an extraordinary trans-oceanic distribution for a tree with no close relatives on either landmass. First described by the French botanist Aubert du Petit-Thouars in 1808, it has just one accepted synonym, Soulangia arborea (Thouars) G.Don.

Identification is straightforward in its native range because no other trees occur there. It typically forms a dense, gnarled, wind-pruned shrub, but in sheltered gullies and on protected slopes it can grow into a proper small tree 6–7 m tall with a crooked, multi-stemmed trunk. The leaves are narrow, needle-like to linear, 1–2 cm long, dark glossy green above and densely silvery-white and downy beneath — the rolled-under margins and felted undersides are classic adaptations to salt-laden, persistently windy oceanic conditions. Small greenish-white, honey-scented flowers are borne in dense terminal clusters and are followed by small hairy capsules containing seeds that are eaten and dispersed by endemic land birds.

On Gough Island and the Tristan group, Phylica arborea is the defining component of the lowland vegetation belt, typically between sea level and about 300–500 m elevation. It grows intermixed with the endemic bog fern Blechnum palmiforme to form the iconic 'fernbush' plant community that cloaks the islands' coastal terraces and gullies. On Amsterdam Island, where it once covered roughly 1,500 ha in a belt between 100 and 250 m altitude, it was nearly eliminated by the 1792 volcanic eruption, subsequent fires, and damage from feral cattle; today only about 10 ha of native Phylica forest survive in the protected Grand Bois reserve, supplemented by thousands of replanted trees.

Ecologically, Phylica arborea is a keystone species whose importance is out of all proportion to its modest size. Its thickets provide the primary nesting habitat for the Endangered Atlantic Yellow-nosed Albatross (Thalassarche chlororhynchos), which builds its pedestal nests among wind-bent Island Trees across Gough and Tristan. It is also the sole food plant of two endemic Tristan finches in the genus Nesospiza — including the Critically Endangered Wilkins's bunting, whose massive bill evolved specifically to crack Phylica fruits. The Tristan Albatross (Diomedea dabbenena) nests higher up on wet heath, but the Phylica forest underpins the entire lowland ecosystem that supports the wider seabird community. The species is currently classified as Endangered on the IUCN Red List, and is under acute new threat from an introduced sap-sucking insect, the brown soft scale (Coccus hesperidum), which by 2018 had infected 85–100% of trees in some stands and is driving rapid decline; a biocontrol programme using the parasitoid wasp Microterys nietneri began in 2021.

Common names

Island Cape Myrtle

More information about Island Cape Myrtle

Is Island Cape Myrtle (Phylica arborea) toxic to pets or humans?

There is no published toxicity data for Phylica arborea. The species has not been formally evaluated by the ASPCA or major veterinary toxicology references, and authoritative botanical sources (Kew's POWO, the RHS, Wikipedia) do not flag it as poisonous. On its native oceanic islands, the woody fruits are a food source for the endemic Wilkins's Bunting, which suggests the fruit is not acutely toxic to vertebrates. Treat it as unknown: keep plant material out of reach of cats, dogs, and curious children, and contact a vet or poison control centre if ingestion occurs.

How much water does Phylica arborea need?

💧 Moist

In its native sub-Antarctic oceanic habitat, Phylica arborea lives under near-constant moisture from rain, fog and cloud cover, yet always on well-drained volcanic slopes. In cultivation this translates to moderate, regular watering: keep the root zone evenly moist but never standing in water. The thick, leathery, needle-like leaves offer some tolerance to short dry spells, but prolonged drought is not natural for the species. Reduce watering noticeably in cool weather.

What soil does Phylica arborea prefer?

pH: Acid to neutral Light to medium

Phylica arborea grows naturally on volcanic oceanic-island soils — rocky slopes, plateaus and coastal outcrops over basaltic parent material, often with an organic peat-like topsoil. The best cultivated mix is light to medium textured and sharply drained: a free-draining loam amended generously with coarse grit, pumice or lava rock, plus some organic matter to hold moisture. Aim for a slightly acidic to neutral pH. Avoid heavy clay, soggy mixes and anything limey or alkaline.

How much light does Phylica arborea need?

Give Phylica arborea as much direct sun as you can. On Gough and Tristan it is a canopy or near-canopy plant on open, wind-exposed slopes, often with no overstory at all. Its narrow, leathery leaves with silvery-downy undersides are classic adaptations to high light and constant wind. Indoors it rarely thrives — plan on an outdoor position in full sun (in cool-summer climates) or the brightest, most open spot you can offer under glass, with good air movement.

What humidity does Phylica arborea like?

Phylica arborea is an oceanic-island species that lives in almost perpetual humidity: the fernbush zones of Gough Island where it dominates are regularly wrapped in cloud, fog and salt-laden spray, and its branches typically carry dense growths of mosses and lichens. In cultivation it strongly prefers high ambient humidity combined with cool temperatures and steady air movement. Dry, warm indoor air is a poor fit; a cool greenhouse, mist house or sheltered maritime garden is a much better environment.

How big does Phylica arborea get and how fast does it grow?

Slow

Phylica arborea is a slow-growing evergreen shrub or small tree. In its native oceanic-island habitat it can reach 6–7 m tall in sheltered gullies, with specimens up to about 7.6 m recorded, but it is typically much smaller — around 3 m tall and 2 m wide — in the open wild and only 1.5–2.5 m tall and wide in UK cultivation. The RHS puts time to ultimate height at 10–20 years, so expect a gain of only a few centimetres a year. Growth is fastest in cool, humid oceanic conditions with steady moisture and well-drained, acidic soil.

What temperatures can Phylica arborea tolerate?

Phylica arborea is adapted to a cool, oceanic climate with remarkably little seasonal variation — its native islands sit between roughly 10 and 15 °C year round. It thrives in mild summers (ideally below about 25 °C) and cool but largely frost-free winters. The RHS rates it H2, meaning it only reliably tolerates minimums of 1–5 °C and should be overwintered in a cool greenhouse in most of the UK. European growers report it can survive brief dips to about -12 °C in sharp-draining soil, corresponding to USDA Zones 9–10. Strong cold winds are more damaging than cold itself.

What are Phylica arborea flowers like?

🌸 November-January

Phylica arborea produces dense terminal clusters of small, greenish-white flowers with a light honey scent, typically blooming in the Southern Hemisphere spring and early summer (November to January in its native range). Individual flowers are inconspicuous, but in full flush the clusters form creamy heads at branch tips. After pollination, the plant produces small hairy capsules containing seeds that are dispersed by endemic island birds.

How is Phylica arborea pollinated?

🐝 Insects

Phylica arborea is pollinated by insects. Its small, honey-scented, greenish-white flowers clustered at branch tips match the classic insect-pollination syndrome. On its remote oceanic islands the actual pollinators are a small set of endemic flies and other invertebrates, since bee diversity is low. Seed dispersal is distinct from pollination: fruits are eaten and dispersed mainly by endemic land birds, including the Critically Endangered Wilkins's Bunting.

Do Phylica arborea flowers have a scent?

The flower clusters carry a light, sweet, honey-like fragrance that is typical of many Phylica species. The scent is subtle rather than strong, matching the small size of individual blooms, and is most noticeable when several clusters are open at once. The foliage itself is not notably scented.

Is Phylica arborea edible?

Phylica arborea is not a food plant. There are no culinary uses for any part of the tree, and it is not cultivated or harvested for human consumption. The small woody fruits are eaten by endemic island birds (notably the Wilkins's Bunting), but this does not make them palatable or safe for humans.

Does Phylica arborea have medicinal uses?

There are no documented medicinal or ethnobotanical uses for Phylica arborea. As an extremely restricted oceanic-island endemic with a very small historical human population on Tristan da Cunha, it has never entered traditional medicine. It should be regarded strictly as an ecological keystone species, not a therapeutic plant.

What other uses does Phylica arborea have?

🔧 Rating 2/5

Phylica arborea's main importance is ecological rather than commercial: it is the sole native tree of Tristan da Cunha and Gough Island and provides nesting habitat for the Endangered Atlantic Yellow-nosed Albatross and critical food for the Critically Endangered Wilkins's Bunting. Historically, Tristan islanders used the wood for firewood and small-scale construction, since no other tree species was available. Today it is largely a conservation subject — the focus of IUCN-listed recovery programmes rather than horticultural trade.

How difficult is Phylica arborea to grow?

Phylica arborea is extremely rarely cultivated outside its native South Atlantic and Indian Ocean islands, and it is considered challenging to grow. It requires a cool, frost-free maritime climate with steady moisture, high humidity, and strong light — conditions that are difficult to reproduce inland. Even specialist growers report inconsistent performance, and the species has not established itself in general horticulture.

Where does Phylica arborea come from?

Phylica arborea is endemic to a handful of remote oceanic islands. It grows wild on the Tristan da Cunha archipelago (including Tristan, Inaccessible and Nightingale) and Gough Island in the South Atlantic, and on Amsterdam Island in the southern Indian Ocean. On Tristan and Amsterdam it is the only native tree; on Amsterdam Island the last dense stand now survives in just ~10 hectares at Grand Bois.

Does Phylica arborea need fertilizer?

In the wild, Phylica arborea grows on nutrient-poor volcanic soils enriched mostly by seabird guano and leaf litter, so it is adapted to lean conditions and does not need heavy feeding. If grown in cultivation, a light dressing of balanced slow-release fertilizer in spring is more than enough; avoid rich or high-nitrogen feeds, which can push soft growth vulnerable to wind and cold. As a Rhamnaceae relative of Cape-native Phylica species, it likely dislikes phosphorus-heavy fertilizers.

How do I care for Phylica arborea through the seasons?

In its native range, Phylica arborea experiences cool, wet, windy maritime conditions year-round with mild winters and no extended frost. In cultivation, treat it as a cool-temperate evergreen: keep it steadily moist and airy in spring and summer, reduce watering slightly in winter, and protect it from hard frost at all times, as seeds and seedlings are particularly frost-sensitive. Avoid hot, dry summer spells by providing afternoon shade and mulch in warmer climates.

Are there different varieties of Phylica arborea?

No named cultivars or horticultural varieties of Phylica arborea are recognised. Botanists do note variation between island populations, and the Amsterdam Island plants have at times been treated as the distinct form Phylica nitida, but this is generally lumped back into P. arborea. For growers, there is effectively only one form on offer, typically propagated from seed collected on Tristan or Gough.

Can I grow Phylica arborea outdoors?

🇺🇸 USDA 9-10 🇬🇧 UK Zone H2

Phylica arborea can be grown outdoors only in mild maritime climates that mimic its native Tristan da Cunha conditions, such as coastal parts of the UK, Ireland, New Zealand, southern Australia and coastal California. It needs full sun, free-draining soil, steady moisture, and shelter from cold drying winds and hard frost. It is not hardy enough for continental winters and is not suited to hot, dry inland gardens.

Should I prune Phylica arborea?

Phylica arborea naturally forms a dense, thicket-forming shrub or small tree and needs little pruning. Light tip-pruning after flowering can encourage a bushier habit and help it withstand wind, and any dead or wind-damaged branches can be removed at any time. Avoid heavy cuts into old wood, as Rhamnaceae species generally do not resprout reliably from bare wood.

How often should I repot Phylica arborea?

As a woody tree that can eventually reach 6–7 m, Phylica arborea is not a long-term container plant, but young specimens in pots can be potted on every 2–3 years in spring into a slightly larger container with gritty, free-draining compost. Handle the rootball gently, as Phylica species dislike root disturbance. In the long run it is better placed in the ground in a sheltered, frost-free spot than kept pot-bound.

How is Phylica arborea propagated?

Phylica arborea is propagated almost exclusively from fresh seed. Conservation programmes on Amsterdam Island used seed from surviving trees to replant around 7,000 seedlings after cattle were removed, so seed is clearly viable when conditions are right. Germination is slow and patchy and is strongly suppressed by frost, so seeds should be sown fresh in a frost-free, bright propagator in gritty, free-draining compost. Semi-hardwood cuttings may work, as they do for related Cape Phylica species, but success is poorly documented.

Why are my Phylica arborea's leaves turning yellow?

Phylica arborea is rarely cultivated, so there is little species-specific guidance on leaf problems. As a general rule for this kind of cool-maritime evergreen, yellowing leaves most often point to waterlogged or compacted soil, poor drainage, or a lack of micronutrients on overly alkaline soil. Check that the roots are not sitting in water, ease up on fertilizer, and consider whether the plant is being pushed too hard by dry indoor heating or hot summer sun.

Why are my Phylica arborea's leaves turning brown?

Because Phylica arborea is rarely grown in cultivation, brown leaves should be interpreted from general woody-evergreen principles. The most likely causes are cold or frost damage (the species is clearly frost-sensitive), dry drying winds, sunscorch in a hot climate, or drought stress. Brown, crispy leaf tips usually mean the plant is losing water faster than its roots can replace it.

Why is my Phylica arborea drooping?

There is very little specific literature on drooping in cultivated Phylica arborea, as the species is rarely grown. In a general woody-evergreen context, drooping branches usually reflect either underwatering and drought stress, or the opposite problem of saturated, airless soil that is damaging the roots. Recently repotted or transplanted specimens may also droop briefly while they re-establish.

Why is my Phylica arborea dropping leaves?

Phylica arborea is evergreen and should normally hold its leaves year-round, so noticeable leaf drop is a sign something is wrong. Given how rarely it is cultivated, the likely causes are the same as for other cool-maritime evergreens: sudden environmental change (transplant shock, a move indoors or outdoors), cold or frost damage, drought stress, or root problems from overwatering. A light, steady loss of the oldest interior leaves is normal.

Why is my Phylica arborea growing so slowly?

Phylica arborea is naturally a slow-growing tree in its wild island habitats, where exposed wind-blasted specimens stay stunted and even sheltered trees rarely exceed 6–7 metres. Slow growth in cultivation is therefore usually not a problem, especially in cool climates or in containers. If growth seems unreasonably poor, check for waterlogging, excessive shade, or lack of warmth during the growing season.

What pests and diseases affect Phylica arborea?

In the wild, the main threats to Phylica arborea are not classical pests but introduced species: cattle and livestock on Tristan and Amsterdam Island historically destroyed whole forests, and invasive house mice on Gough Island have been linked to seed predation and failed regeneration. More recently, an introduced sap-sucking brown soft scale (Coccus hesperidum) has infected 85–100% of trees in some stands on Tristan, with biocontrol using Microterys nietneri starting in 2021. Like most Rhamnaceae it can also be vulnerable to root rot in waterlogged soil.


More info:
Wikipedia GBIF

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