PART 11. :
1898 that the name Coffea robusta appeared. That was the name
applied to a specimen of coffee sent from Congo to Brussels and
discovered there by the Belgian Botanist Emil Laurent. de Wildman
describes a Robusta Coffee from the Gaboon as C. canephora;
Zimmermann of Amani described the Bukoba Coffee C. bukobensis and
the coffee of Uganda native gardens has been named by some authority
C. ugandae.
There is a great deal of variation among Robusta plants and that
no doubt has led to considerable confusion in nomenclature. Among
the trees in native gardens in Uganda one can find trees with long
and narrow leaves, others with broad leaves, trees also with very
small cherry, others with large. The differences are very marked
indeed, so marked that to attach varietal names to them would be
quite justifiable.
We have seen that Robusta Coffee has been found in the Congo
and Gaboon. These localities are no doubt the natural home of the
plant. Tt extends in its distribution to forest of the Semuliki valley
and to the forests of the Western Province of Uganda, where it is
exploited by the natives. It is doubtful if it occurs at all as a
natural plant in Buganda proper.
1 know it occurs in some of the forests of the Lake region and also
further inland. I have seen these trees and they appear to me to be
too localised and too near habitation to indicate a wild habit; they do
now nevertheless exist as wild plants.
The Baganda themselves have a tradition that their Coffee came
from the north with their first traditional King ** Kintu.”” In a recent
letter from the Agricultural Officer in Southern Sudan I am informed
that Robusta Coffee occurs wild in the highlands of Mongalla. So
this fact would seem to confirm the theory regarding the origin of
their coffee.
Now all this goes to shew that Robusta Coffee is a fairly widely
distributed plant under native condition in central Tropical Africa,
and when we hear of Robusta Coffee, Uganda Coffee, Bukoba Coffee,
and Congo Coffee, we shall know that we are dealing with one and
the same group.
In 1902 specimens from a coffee bush 20ft. high in a native garden
in Entebbe, were sent to Kew and were described as Robusta Coffee.
The discovery of robusta in the Congo in 1898 was very opportune,
as the great Coffee producing countries of the East were looking for a
hardy type to take the place of the Arabica Coffee, the exports of
which were being gradually diminished owing to the blight Hemileia
vastatriz. In this connection I shall quote from the Tropical
Agriculturalist, Vol. 44, 1917, page 314.
When the blight in Java appeared coffee-growing was one of
the most important industries in that island, and after the
plantations had been destroyed by the disease, the Dutch Govern-
ment having failed to control the blight by repressive measures,
instituted investigations with a view to discovering a blight-
resistant coffee, in the course of which work several species were
introduced and tested. Among these were Liberian coffee (Coffea
liberica) and robusta coffee, considered by WiLpEMAN to be a
variety of Coffea canephora.
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