In many points Entada scandens presents a parallel to Cæsalpinia bonducella, another Leguminous tropical plant which occurs also at the coast and inland. But since they both owe their wide distribution to their littoral station, it will be as coast plants that they will be most properly considered in this and the following chapter. Yet if the student were to regard the distribution of these two plants in a continental region as in India, where they extend inland to the Himalayas, he might fail to discern their true station. To accurately gauge the matter of their station, it is necessary for him to look at the plants as they occur in the islands of the Pacific. There he will first see the stranding of the seeds on a shore by the currents, then their germination and their development into giant-climbers over the littoral trees or into straggling bushes on the beach; and afterwards he will observe the plants of both species extending inland, and in these three stages he will learn their history in the Pacific; but a history, it may be observed, that in this region represents their efforts to return to an inland station, such as they once possessed in their birthplace in some distant region of the globe.
Dealing first with the station of Entada scandens, it may be remarked, as Dr. Seemann points out, that in Fiji it is most characteristic of the mangrove-formation. But it also occurs amongst the trees at the back of the mangrove swamp, on the beaches, on the banks of the estuaries, and at the edge of the inland forests where they border on the plains. Sometimes in the company of Derris uliginosa it grows not as a climber, but as a prostrate plant on the sandy beaches; and here, not being able to assume its normal habit of a climber, it does not seed. It is to be found at times far inland in open-wooded districts. Thus in Vanua Levu I found it growing in the Mbua district four miles inland, and 1,400 feet above the sea. Reinecke speaks of it in Samoa only in connection with the “urwald,” or primeval forest. Cheeseman describes it as most abundant in the interior of Rarotonga, covering the trees with a wide-spreading canopy of green. In the Malayan region Schimper refers to it as a plant of the beach-tree formation. In Ecuador and on the Panama Isthmus it grows not only at the coast, but also on the hill-slopes in the rear of the mangrove-belt.
With reference to the distribution of the plant, it may be remarked that, although it is found all round the tropics and possesses great capacity for dispersal by currents, there are certain difficulties in explaining its wide area and in accounting for its very peculiar distribution in the Pacific islands. It was doubtless in allusion to some of these difficulties that Mr. Darwin, in a letter to Sir Joseph Hooker, remarked: “Entada is a beast” (More Letters, &c., i, 93). There is at first the question of the identity of the species in the Old and New Worlds. It is here assumed that it is the same in both hemispheres; but it must not be forgotten that the identity is “not beyond doubt” (Bot. Chall. Exped. iv, 147).
Then there is the difficulty connected with its occurrence on both coasts of tropical America. In this respect it is at one with some other littoral plants, like Ipomœa pes capræ, as well as with the plants of the mangrove formation, as is pointed out in [Chapter VIII.] Whilst with the mangroves it is necessary to assume that they antedate the land connection between North and South America, this is not requisite in the case of Entada scandens, since it grows in the interior of the Panama Isthmus, and rivers on the north and south sides now carry its seeds seaward from the same “divide” to the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, as described in [Chapter XXXII.]
But, as I have also shown in [Chapter VIII], America forms with the West Coast of Africa a region characterised by the same tropical littoral flora. This region, on account of the arrangement of the currents, stands in a very peculiar relation with the Asiatic region, which comprises the rest of the tropics, and to a great extent possesses its own peculiar strand-flora. There are a few littoral plants, like Entada scandens, Canavalia obtusifolia, Sophora tomentosa, and Ipomœa pes capræ that occur in both areas; but the large majority are confined to one or other of them, either to the American region, including the African West Coast, or to the Old World region, which includes the African East Coast. The American region gives to the Old World, but it can receive nothing in return. For this reason, it is argued, we are compelled to regard most, if not all, of the cosmopolitan tropical shore plants that are dispersed by the currents, such as those above named, as having their home in the American region. Entada scandens would, therefore, from this standpoint have its home in America.
Then, again, there is the difficulty connected with the distribution of this plant on both sides of tropical Africa. Though Oliver in his Flora of Tropical Africa mentions this species only in connection with the West Coast, he says it is probably widely spread in that continent, and he refers to a pod in the Kew Museum indistinctly labelled “Lake Ngami.” I have not come upon any reference to its being a littoral plant on the East Coast, but since numerous littoral plants of tropical Asia are found on that coast its occurrence there or in the East African islands would be expected. However, as the genus has a centre in America, and as this species is regarded as of American birth, we are not called upon to employ the argument used in assigning to a non-American genus like Afzelia an African home. Since the African West Coast belongs to the American region of tropical shore plants dispersed by the currents, the presence of Entada scandens on that coast of Africa can be readily explained, whilst if it has reached the Malayan Archipelago from America by way of the Pacific, it would, by extending like many other Malayan coast-plants along the shores of the Indian Ocean, almost complete its circuit of the globe. It is in this fashion, I believe, that the other littoral plants,, like Cæsalpinia bonducella, Canavalia obtusifolia, and Ipomœa pes capræ, that are found all round the tropics, have performed the circuit of the globe with America as their home.
One may remark in passing that the double home of the genus in America and the Old World, though offering a serious difficulty in plant geography, has no immediate bearing on the present mode of distribution of Entada scandens. Questions relating to the distribution of tropical shore-plants that are dispersed by the currents at first resolve themselves into considerations of the arrangement of the currents. Entada is not alone amongst the genera containing littoral species in having a home both in the Old and in the New World. Carapa is another instance, and additional cases might be cited.
The next peculiarity in the geographical range of this species is concerned with its irregular distribution in the archipelagoes of the tropical Pacific. Notwithstanding its great capacity for dispersal by the currents, although it occurs in all the groups of the Western Pacific as well as in the Cook Islands, it has not been recorded from the Society Islands, the Paumotus, the Marquesas, and Hawaii. Since, however, its seeds have been gathered by Mr. Arundel on the beaches of Flint Island, lying about six degrees north of Tahiti (Bot. Chall. iv, 302), it is not unlikely that it will be found growing in other parts of Eastern Polynesia south of the equator. One might have looked for an explanation of its rarity in Eastern Polynesia to the absence of mangrove swamps, in which, as in Fiji, it is sometimes most at home; but this is negatived by its abundance in Rarotonga, where mangrove swamps do not exist.
The dispersal of Entada scandens by the currents.—This plant offers one of the most conspicuous examples of the transport of seeds across oceans through the agency of the currents. In the pages of many botanical works, from the close of the 17th century onward, reference is made to the transport of its beans (often in association with those of Mucuna urens and Cæsalpinia bonducella) by the Gulf Stream or other currents across the Atlantic to St. Helena, the Azores, the west coast of Ireland, the Hebrides, the Orkney Islands, the coasts of Scandinavia, and even as far north as Nova Zembla (see Hemsley’s Bot. Chall. Exped.; Sernander’s Skand. Veg. Spridningsbiologi, &c.). That the seeds of Entada scandens retain their germinating capacity after this ocean-transport has been demonstrated not only by the germination of stranded seeds on the shores of St. Helena, but also by the germination when sown at Kew of seeds drifted to the Azores, as well as by the results obtained by Lindman, who procured the germination of the seeds of this plant and of Mucuna urens that had been washed up on the Scandinavian beaches (see Sernander, pp. 7, 390).
One of the most interesting references to the conveyance by currents of these seeds to the coasts of Europe is to be found in Dr. Sernander’s recent work on the modes of dispersal of the Scandinavian flora, where he sums up the results of Lindman’s investigations respecting the Gulf Stream drift. The stranded seeds of Entada scandens, it appears, have been found all along the Norwegian coast, but occur most frequently north of the Söndmöre district. They have even been found in a sub-fossil condition in the peat-bogs of Tjörn on the Bohuslän coast in Sweden, having been originally stranded on a beach in that locality at some distant, but post-glacial, epoch. Few phenomena in plant-distribution are more suggestive than this ineffectual transport through the ages of these large tropical beans to coasts within the Arctic Circle. The seed, no longer under the care of the mother-plant, becomes a waif, exposed to the pitiless laws of the physical world which here prevail. It was not thus that the plant was reared, but it is in this haphazard fashion that its seeds are spread. The philosopher could unravel most of the tangled problems connected with present and past plant-dispersal, if he could follow the clue supplied by this stranded tropical seed on a Scandinavian beach.