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Acacia sensu lato

Acacia s.l. (pronounced /əˈkʃə/ or /əˈksiə/), known commonly as mimosa, acacia, thorntree or wattle,[2] is a polyphyletic genus of shrubs and trees belonging to the subfamily Mimosoideae of the family Fabaceae. It was described by the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus in 1773 based on the African species Acacia nilotica. Many non-Australian species tend to be thorny, whereas the majority of Australian acacias are not. All species are pod-bearing, with sap and leaves often bearing large amounts of tannins and condensed tannins that historically found use as pharmaceuticals and preservatives.

Acacia s.l.
Senegalia greggii (syn. A. greggii)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Fabales
Family: Fabaceae
Subfamily: Caesalpinioideae
Clade: Mimosoid clade
Genus: Acacia
Mill.[1]
Type species
Acacia nilotica (until 2005)
Acacia penninervis (post 2005)
Species

About 1,300; see list of Acacia species

The genus Acacia constitutes, in its traditional circumspection, the second largest genus in Fabaceae[3] (Astragalus being the largest), with roughly 1,300 species, about 960 of them native to Australia, with the remainder spread around the tropical to warm-temperate regions of both hemispheres, including Europe, Africa, southern Asia, and the Americas (see List of Acacia species). The genus was divided into five separate genera under the tribe "Acacieae". The genus now called Acacia represents the majority of the Australian species and a few native to southeast Asia, Réunion, and Pacific Islands. Most of the species outside Australia, and a small number of Australian species, are classified into Vachellia and Senegalia. The two final genera, Acaciella and Mariosousa, each contain about a dozen species from the Americas (but see "Classification" below for the ongoing debate concerning their taxonomy).

Acacia tree near the limit of its range in the Negev Desert of southern Israel
Golden wattle (Acacia pycnantha), the floral emblem of Australia
Seed pods of Acacia species from the MHNT

Classification edit

English botanist and gardener Philip Miller adopted the name Acacia in 1754. The generic name is derived from ἀκακία (akakia), the name given by early Greek botanist-physician Pedanius Dioscorides (middle to late first century) to the medicinal tree A. nilotica in his book Materia Medica.[4] This name derives from the Ancient Greek word for its characteristic thorns, ἀκίς (akis; "thorn").[5] The species name nilotica was given by Linnaeus from this tree's best-known range along the Nile river. This became the type species of the genus.

The traditional circumscription of Acacia eventually contained approximately 1,300 species. However, evidence began to accumulate that the genus as described was not monophyletic. Queensland botanist Les Pedley proposed the subgenus Phyllodineae be renamed Racosperma and published the binomial names.[6][7] This was taken up in New Zealand but generally not followed in Australia, where botanists declared more study was needed.[citation needed]

Eventually, consensus emerged that Acacia needed to be split as it was not monophyletic. This led to Australian botanists Bruce Maslin and Tony Orchard pushing for the retypification of the genus with an Australian species instead of the original African type species, an exception to traditional rules of priority that required ratification by the International Botanical Congress.[8] That decision has been controversial,[3][9] and debate continued, with some taxonomists (and many other biologists) deciding to continue to use the traditional Acacia sensu lato circumscription of the genus,[8] in defiance of decisions by an International Botanical Congress.[10][11] However, a second International Botanical Congress has now confirmed the decision to apply the name Acacia to the mostly Australian plants, which some had been calling Racosperma, and which had formed the overwhelming majority of Acacia sensu lato.[12][13][14] Debate continues regarding the traditional acacias of Africa, possibly placed in Senegalia and Vachellia, and some of the American species, possibly placed in Acaciella and Mariosousa.

Acacias belong to the subfamily Mimosoideae, the major clades of which may have formed in response to drying trends and fire regimes that accompanied increased seasonality during the late Oligocene to early Miocene (~25 mya).[15] Pedley (1978), following Vassal (1972), viewed Acacia as comprising three large subgenera, but subsequently (1986) raised the rank of these groups to genera Acacia, Senegalia (s.l.) and Racosperma,[6][7] which was underpinned by later genetic studies.

In common parlance, the term "acacia" is occasionally applied to species of the genus Robinia, which also belongs in the pea family. Robinia pseudoacacia, an American species locally known as black locust, is sometimes called "false acacia" in cultivation in the United Kingdom and throughout Europe.

Description edit

 
Acacia fasciculifera seedling in the transitional stage between pinnate leaves and phyllodes

The leaves of acacias are compound pinnate in general. In some species, however, more especially in the Australian and Pacific Islands species, the leaflets are suppressed, and the leaf-stalks (petioles) become vertically flattened in order to serve the purpose of leaves. These are known as "phyllodes". The vertical orientation of the phyllodes protects them from intense sunlight since with their edges towards the sky and earth they do not intercept light as fully as horizontally placed leaves. A few species (such as Acacia glaucoptera) lack leaves or phyllodes altogether but instead possess cladodes, modified leaf-like photosynthetic stems functioning as leaves.

The small flowers have five very small petals, almost hidden by the long stamens, and are arranged in dense, globular or cylindrical clusters; they are yellow or cream-colored in most species, whitish in some, or even purple (Acacia purpureopetala) or red (Acacia leprosa 'Scarlet Blaze'). Acacia flowers can be distinguished from those of a large related genus, Albizia, by their stamens, which are not joined at the base. Also, unlike individual Mimosa flowers, those of Acacia have more than ten stamens.[16]

The plants often bear spines, especially those species growing in arid regions. These sometimes represent branches that have become short, hard, and pungent, though they sometimes represent leaf-stipules. Acacia armata is the kangaroo-thorn of Australia, and Acacia erioloba (syn. Acacia eriolobata) is the camelthorn of Africa.

Acacia seeds can be difficult to germinate. Research has found that immersing the seeds in various temperatures (usually around 80 °C (176 °F)) and manual seed coat chipping can improve growth to around 80%.[17]

Symbiosis edit

 
Acacia collinsii stipules
 
Swollen stipules of Acacia drepanolobium that serve as ant domatia. An entry hole can be seen at the base of one of the spines of the largest domatia. From the MHNT

In the Central American bullthorn acacias—Acacia sphaerocephala, Acacia cornigera and Acacia collinsii — some of the spiny stipules are large, swollen and hollow. These afford shelter for several species of Pseudomyrmex ants, which feed on extrafloral nectaries on the leaf-stalk and small lipid-rich food-bodies at the tips of the leaflets called Beltian bodies. In return, the ants add protection to the plant against herbivores.[18] Some species of ants will also remove competing plants around the acacia, cutting off the offending plants' leaves with their jaws and ultimately killing them. Other associated ant species appear to do nothing to benefit their hosts.

Similar mutualisms with ants occur on Acacia trees in Africa, such as the whistling thorn acacia. The acacias provide shelter for ants in similar swollen stipules and nectar in extrafloral nectaries for their symbiotic ants, such as Crematogaster mimosae. In turn, the ants protect the plant by attacking large mammalian herbivores and stem-boring beetles that damage the plant.[19]

The predominantly herbivorous spider Bagheera kiplingi, which is found in Central America and Mexico, feeds on nubs at the tips of the acacia leaves, known as Beltian bodies, which contain high concentrations of protein. These nubs are produced by the acacia as part of a symbiotic relationship with certain species of ant, which also eat them.[20]

Pests edit

In Australia, Acacia species are sometimes used as food plants by the larvae of hepialid moths of the genus Aenetus including A. ligniveren. These burrow horizontally into the trunk then vertically down. Other Lepidoptera larvae which have been recorded feeding on Acacia include brown-tail, Endoclita malabaricus and turnip moth. The leaf-mining larvae of some bucculatricid moths also feed on Acacia; Bucculatrix agilis feeds exclusively on Acacia horrida and Bucculatrix flexuosa feeds exclusively on Acacia nilotica.

Acacias contain a number of organic compounds that defend them from pests and grazing animals.[21]

Uses edit

Use as human food edit

 
Acacia dealbata seeds

Acacia seeds are often used for food and a variety of other products.

In Myanmar, Laos, and Thailand, the feathery shoots of Acacia pennata (common name cha-om, ชะอม and su pout ywet in Burmese) are used in soups, curries, omelettes, and stir-fries.

Gum edit

Various species of acacia yield gum. True gum arabic is the product of Acacia senegal, abundant in dry tropical West Africa from Senegal to northern Nigeria.

Acacia nilotica (syn. Acacia arabica) is the gum arabic tree of India, but yields a gum inferior to the true gum arabic. Gum arabic is used in a wide variety of food products, including some soft drinks[22] and confections.

The ancient Egyptians used acacia gum in paints.[23]

 
Sap, from which gum can be made, oozing from an Acacia tree in Phoenix, Arizona

The gum of Acacia xanthophloea and Acacia karroo has a high sugar content and is sought out by the lesser bushbaby. Acacia karroo gum was once used for making confectionery and traded under the name "Cape Gum". It was also used medicinally to treat cattle suffering poisoning by Moraea species.[24]

Uses in folk medicine edit

Acacia species have possible uses in folk medicine. A 19th-century Ethiopian medical text describes a potion made from an Ethiopian species (known as grar) mixed with the root of the tacha, then boiled, as a cure for rabies.[25]

An astringent medicine high in tannins, called catechu or cutch, is procured from several species, but more especially from Senegalia catechu (syn. Acacia catechu), by boiling down the wood and evaporating the solution so as to get an extract.[26][27] The catechu extract from A. catechu figures in the history of chemistry in giving its name to the catechin, catechol, and catecholamine chemical families ultimately derived from it.

Ornamental uses edit

A few species are widely grown as ornamentals in gardens; the most popular perhaps is A. dealbata (silver wattle), with its attractive glaucous to silvery leaves and bright yellow flowers; it is erroneously known as "mimosa" in some areas where it is cultivated, through confusion with the related genus Mimosa.

Another ornamental acacia is the fever tree. Southern European florists use A. baileyana, A. dealbata, A. pycnantha and A. retinodes as cut flowers and the common name there for them is mimosa.[28]

Ornamental species of acacias are also used by homeowners and landscape architects for home security. The sharp thorns of some species are a deterrent to trespassing, and may prevent break-ins if planted under windows and near drainpipes. The aesthetic characteristics of acacia plants, in conjunction with their home security qualities, makes them a reasonable alternative to constructed fences and walls.

Perfume edit

 
Acacia farnesiana

Acacia farnesiana is used in the perfume industry due to its strong fragrance. The use of acacia as a fragrance dates back centuries.

Symbolism and ritual edit

 
Egyptian goddess Isis

Egyptian mythology has associated the acacia tree with characteristics of the tree of life, such as in the Myth of Osiris and Isis.

Several parts (mainly bark, root, and resin) of Acacia species are used to make incense for rituals. Acacia is used in incense mainly in India, Nepal, and China including in its Tibet region. Smoke from acacia bark is thought to keep demons and ghosts away and to put the gods in a good mood. Roots and resin from acacia are combined with rhododendron, acorus, cytisus, salvia, and some other components of incense. Both people and elephants like an alcoholic beverage made from acacia fruit.[29] According to Easton's Bible Dictionary, the acacia tree may be the "burning bush" (Exodus 3:2) which Moses encountered in the desert.[30] Also, when God gave Moses the instructions for building the Tabernacle, he said to "make an ark" and "a table of acacia wood" (Exodus 25:10 & 23, Revised Standard Version). Also, in the Christian tradition, Christ's crown of thorns is thought to have been woven from acacia.[31]

Acacia was used for Zulu warriors' iziQu (or isiKu) beads, which passed on through Robert Baden-Powell to the Scout movement's Wood Badge training award.[32]

In Russia, Italy, and other countries, it is customary to present women with yellow mimosas (among other flowers) on International Women's Day (March 8). These "mimosas" may be from A. dealbata (silver wattle).

In 1918, May Gibbs, the popular Australian children's author, wrote the book 'Wattle Babies', in which a third-person narrator describes the lives of imaginary inhabitants of the Australian forests (the 'bush'). The main characters are the Wattle Babies, who are tiny people that look like acacia flowers and who interact with various forest creatures. Gibbs wrote "Wattle Babies are the sunshine of the Bush. In Winter, when the sky is grey and all the world seems cold, they put on their yellowest clothes and come out, for they have such cheerful hearts."[33] Gibbs was referring to the fact that an abundance of acacias flower in August in Australia, in the midst of the southern hemisphere winter.[34]

Tannin edit

The bark of various Australian species, known as wattles, is very rich in tannin and forms an important article of export; important species include A. pycnantha (golden wattle), A. decurrens (tan wattle), A. dealbata (silver wattle) and A. mearnsii (black wattle).

Black wattle is grown in plantations in South Africa and South America. The pods of A. nilotica (under the name of neb-neb), and of other African species, are also rich in tannin and used by tanners. In Yemen, the principal tannin substance was derived from the leaves of the salam-tree (Acacia etbaica), a tree known locally by the name qaraẓ (garadh).[35][36] A bath solution of the crushed leaves of this tree, into which raw leather had been inserted for prolonged soaking, would take only 15 days for curing. The water and leaves, however, required changing after seven or eight days, and the leather needed to be turned over daily.

Wood edit

 
Acacia koa wood

Some Acacia species are valuable as timber, such as A. melanoxylon (blackwood) from Australia, which attains a great size; its wood is used for furniture, and takes a high polish; and A. omalophylla (myall wood, also Australian), which yields a fragrant timber used for ornaments. A. seyal is thought to be the shittah-tree of the Bible, which supplied shittim-wood. According to the Book of Exodus, this was used in the construction of the Ark of the Covenant. A. koa from the Hawaiian Islands and A. heterophylla from Réunion are both excellent timber trees. Depending on abundance and regional culture, some Acacia species (e.g. A. fumosa) are traditionally used locally as firewoods.[37] It is also used to make homes for different animals.

 
A. heterophylla wood

Pulpwood edit

In Indonesia (mainly in Sumatra) and in Malaysia (mainly in Sabah), plantations of A. mangium are being established to supply pulpwood to the paper industry.

Acacia wood pulp gives high opacity and below average bulk paper. This is suitable in lightweight offset papers used for Bibles and dictionaries. It is also used in paper tissue where it improves softness.

Land reclamation edit

Acacias can be planted for erosion control, especially after mining or construction damage.[38]

Ecological invasion edit

For the same reasons it is favored as an erosion-control plant, with its easy spreading and resilience, some varieties of acacia are potentially invasive species. At least fourteen Acacia species introduced to South Africa are categorized as invasive, due to their naturally aggressive propagation.[39][citation needed] One of the most globally significant invasive acacias is black wattle A. mearnsii, which is taking over grasslands and abandoned agricultural areas worldwide, especially in moderate coastal and island regions where mild climate promotes its spread. Australian/New Zealand Weed Risk Assessment gives it a "high risk, score of 15" rating and it is considered one of the world's 100 most invasive species.[40] Extensive ecological studies should be performed before further introduction of acacia varieties, as this fast-growing genus, once introduced, spreads quickly and is extremely difficult to eradicate.

Phytochemistry edit

Cyanogenic glycosides edit

Nineteen different species of Acacia in the Americas contain cyanogenic glycosides, which, if exposed to an enzyme which specifically splits glycosides, can release hydrogen cyanide (HCN) in the "leaves".[41] This sometimes results in the poisoning death of livestock.

If fresh plant material spontaneously produces 200 ppm or more HCN, then it is potentially toxic. This corresponds to about 7.5 μmol HCN per gram of fresh plant material. It turns out that, if acacia "leaves" lack the specific glycoside-splitting enzyme, then they may be less toxic than otherwise, even those containing significant quantities of cyanic glycosides.[42]

Some Acacia species containing cyanogens include Acacia erioloba, A. cunninghamii, A. obtusifolia, A. sieberiana, and A. sieberiana var. woodii[43]

Famous acacias edit

The Arbre du Ténéré in Niger was the most isolated tree in the world, about 400 km (249 mi) from any other tree. The tree was knocked down by a truck driver in 1973.[44]

In Nairobi, Kenya, the Thorn Tree Café is named after a Naivasha thorn tree (Acacia xanthophloea)[45] in its centre. Travelers used to pin notes to others to the thorns of the tree. The current tree is the third of the same variety.

References edit

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  9. ^ Christian Kull; Haripriya Rangan (2012). "Science, sentiment and territorial chauvinism in the acacia name change debate" (PDF). Terra Australis. 34: 197–219. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
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  15. ^ Bouchenak-Khelladi, Yanis; Maurin, Olivier; Hurter, Johan; van der Bank, Michelle (November 2010). "The evolutionary history and biogeography of Mimosoideae (Leguminosae): An emphasis on African acacias". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 57 (2): 495–508. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2010.07.019. PMID 20696261.
  16. ^ Singh, Gurcharan (2004). Plant Systematics: An Integrated Approach. Science Publishers. p. 445. ISBN 978-1-57808-351-0.
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  20. ^ Meehan, Christopher J.; Olson, Eric J.; Curry, Robert L. (21 August 2008): Exploitation of the PseudomyrmexAcacia mutualism by a predominantly vegetarian jumping spider (Bagheera kiplingi) 2019-12-01 at the Wayback Machine. The 93rd ESA Annual Meeting.
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  36. ^ James P. Mandaville, Bedouin Ethnobotany – Plant Concepts and Uses in a Desert Pastoral World, University of Arizona Press 2011, p. 140 (ISBN 978-0-8165-2900-1)
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  39. ^ van Wilgen, Brian (2011). "National-scale strategic approaches for managing introduced plants: Insights from Australian acacias in South Africa". Diversity and Distributions. 17 (5): 1060–1075. doi:10.1111/j.1472-4642.2011.00785.x. hdl:10019.1/112287. JSTOR 41242842. S2CID 85828367 – via JSTOR.
  40. ^ . Hear.org. Archived from the original on 2010-09-08. Retrieved 2013-03-06.
  41. ^ Seigler, David S. (1987). "Cyanogenic Glycosides in Ant-Acacias of Mexico and Central America". The Southwestern Naturalist. 32 (4): 499–503. doi:10.2307/3671484. JSTOR 3671484.
  42. ^ Hegnauer, R. (1996-01-01). Chemotaxonomie der Pflanzen By Robert Hegnauer. Springer. ISBN 9783764351656. Retrieved 2013-03-06.
  43. ^ FAO Kamal M. Ibrahim, The current state of knowledge on Prosopis juliflora... October 18, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Michael Palin, Sahara, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, ISBN 978-0-2978-6359-5
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Further reading edit

  • Clement, B.A.; Goff, C.M.; Forbes, T.D.A. (1998). "Toxic Amines and Alkaloids from Acacia rigidula". Phytochemistry. 49 (5): 1377–1380. Bibcode:1998PChem..49.1377C. doi:10.1016/s0031-9422(97)01022-4.
  • Schindler, Jason R.; Fulbright, Timothy E.; Forbes, T.D.A (2004), "Long-term effects of roller chopping on antiherbivore defenses in three shrub species", Journal of Arid Environments, 56 (1): 181–192, Bibcode:2004JArEn..56..181S, doi:10.1016/S0140-1963(03)00020-X
  • Shulgin, Alexander and Ann, TiHKAL the Continuation. Transform Press, 1997. ISBN 978-0-9630096-9-2

External links edit

  • World Wide Wattle
  • Acacia-world
  • on "The Unforgettable Acacias"
  • A description of Acacia from Pomet's 1709 reference book, History of Druggs 2010-01-11 at the Wayback Machine
  • Dr. Duke's Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases
  • Tannins in Some Interrelated Wattles
  • List of Acacia Species in the U.S.[permanent dead link]
  • FAO Timber Properties of Various Acacia Species
  • FAO Comparison of Various Acacia Species as Forage
  • Acacias with Cyagenic Compounds
  • Acacia Alarm System
  • Acacia in West African plants – A Photo Guide.
  • "Acacia" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.

acacia, sensu, lato, acacia, pronounced, known, commonly, mimosa, acacia, thorntree, wattle, polyphyletic, genus, shrubs, trees, belonging, subfamily, mimosoideae, family, fabaceae, described, swedish, botanist, carl, linnaeus, 1773, based, african, species, a. Acacia s l pronounced e ˈ k eɪ ʃ e or e ˈ k eɪ s i e known commonly as mimosa acacia thorntree or wattle 2 is a polyphyletic genus of shrubs and trees belonging to the subfamily Mimosoideae of the family Fabaceae It was described by the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus in 1773 based on the African species Acacia nilotica Many non Australian species tend to be thorny whereas the majority of Australian acacias are not All species are pod bearing with sap and leaves often bearing large amounts of tannins and condensed tannins that historically found use as pharmaceuticals and preservatives Acacia s l Senegalia greggii syn A greggii Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Eudicots Clade Rosids Order Fabales Family Fabaceae Subfamily Caesalpinioideae Clade Mimosoid clade Genus AcaciaMill 1 Type species Acacia nilotica until 2005 Acacia penninervis post 2005 Species About 1 300 see list of Acacia species The genus Acacia constitutes in its traditional circumspection the second largest genus in Fabaceae 3 Astragalus being the largest with roughly 1 300 species about 960 of them native to Australia with the remainder spread around the tropical to warm temperate regions of both hemispheres including Europe Africa southern Asia and the Americas see List of Acacia species The genus was divided into five separate genera under the tribe Acacieae The genus now called Acacia represents the majority of the Australian species and a few native to southeast Asia Reunion and Pacific Islands Most of the species outside Australia and a small number of Australian species are classified into Vachellia and Senegalia The two final genera Acaciella and Mariosousa each contain about a dozen species from the Americas but see Classification below for the ongoing debate concerning their taxonomy Acacia tree near the limit of its range in the Negev Desert of southern Israel Golden wattle Acacia pycnantha the floral emblem of AustraliaSeed pods of Acacia species from the MHNT Contents 1 Classification 2 Description 3 Symbiosis 4 Pests 5 Uses 5 1 Use as human food 5 2 Gum 5 3 Uses in folk medicine 5 4 Ornamental uses 5 5 Perfume 5 6 Symbolism and ritual 5 7 Tannin 5 8 Wood 5 9 Pulpwood 5 10 Land reclamation 6 Ecological invasion 7 Phytochemistry 7 1 Cyanogenic glycosides 8 Famous acacias 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksClassification editSee also List of Acacia species English botanist and gardener Philip Miller adopted the name Acacia in 1754 The generic name is derived from ἀkakia akakia the name given by early Greek botanist physician Pedanius Dioscorides middle to late first century to the medicinal tree A nilotica in his book Materia Medica 4 This name derives from the Ancient Greek word for its characteristic thorns ἀkis akis thorn 5 The species name nilotica was given by Linnaeus from this tree s best known range along the Nile river This became the type species of the genus The traditional circumscription of Acacia eventually contained approximately 1 300 species However evidence began to accumulate that the genus as described was not monophyletic Queensland botanist Les Pedley proposed the subgenus Phyllodineae be renamed Racosperma and published the binomial names 6 7 This was taken up in New Zealand but generally not followed in Australia where botanists declared more study was needed citation needed Eventually consensus emerged that Acacia needed to be split as it was not monophyletic This led to Australian botanists Bruce Maslin and Tony Orchard pushing for the retypification of the genus with an Australian species instead of the original African type species an exception to traditional rules of priority that required ratification by the International Botanical Congress 8 That decision has been controversial 3 9 and debate continued with some taxonomists and many other biologists deciding to continue to use the traditional Acacia sensu lato circumscription of the genus 8 in defiance of decisions by an International Botanical Congress 10 11 However a second International Botanical Congress has now confirmed the decision to apply the name Acacia to the mostly Australian plants which some had been calling Racosperma and which had formed the overwhelming majority of Acacia sensu lato 12 13 14 Debate continues regarding the traditional acacias of Africa possibly placed in Senegalia and Vachellia and some of the American species possibly placed in Acaciella and Mariosousa Acacias belong to the subfamily Mimosoideae the major clades of which may have formed in response to drying trends and fire regimes that accompanied increased seasonality during the late Oligocene to early Miocene 25 mya 15 Pedley 1978 following Vassal 1972 viewed Acacia as comprising three large subgenera but subsequently 1986 raised the rank of these groups to genera Acacia Senegalia s l and Racosperma 6 7 which was underpinned by later genetic studies In common parlance the term acacia is occasionally applied to species of the genus Robinia which also belongs in the pea family Robinia pseudoacacia an American species locally known as black locust is sometimes called false acacia in cultivation in the United Kingdom and throughout Europe Description edit nbsp Acacia fasciculifera seedling in the transitional stage between pinnate leaves and phyllodes The leaves of acacias are compound pinnate in general In some species however more especially in the Australian and Pacific Islands species the leaflets are suppressed and the leaf stalks petioles become vertically flattened in order to serve the purpose of leaves These are known as phyllodes The vertical orientation of the phyllodes protects them from intense sunlight since with their edges towards the sky and earth they do not intercept light as fully as horizontally placed leaves A few species such as Acacia glaucoptera lack leaves or phyllodes altogether but instead possess cladodes modified leaf like photosynthetic stems functioning as leaves The small flowers have five very small petals almost hidden by the long stamens and are arranged in dense globular or cylindrical clusters they are yellow or cream colored in most species whitish in some or even purple Acacia purpureopetala or red Acacia leprosa Scarlet Blaze Acacia flowers can be distinguished from those of a large related genus Albizia by their stamens which are not joined at the base Also unlike individual Mimosa flowers those of Acacia have more than ten stamens 16 The plants often bear spines especially those species growing in arid regions These sometimes represent branches that have become short hard and pungent though they sometimes represent leaf stipules Acacia armata is the kangaroo thorn of Australia and Acacia erioloba syn Acacia eriolobata is the camelthorn of Africa Acacia seeds can be difficult to germinate Research has found that immersing the seeds in various temperatures usually around 80 C 176 F and manual seed coat chipping can improve growth to around 80 17 Symbiosis edit nbsp Acacia collinsii stipules nbsp Swollen stipules of Acacia drepanolobium that serve as ant domatia An entry hole can be seen at the base of one of the spines of the largest domatia From the MHNT In the Central American bullthorn acacias Acacia sphaerocephala Acacia cornigera and Acacia collinsii some of the spiny stipules are large swollen and hollow These afford shelter for several species of Pseudomyrmex ants which feed on extrafloral nectaries on the leaf stalk and small lipid rich food bodies at the tips of the leaflets called Beltian bodies In return the ants add protection to the plant against herbivores 18 Some species of ants will also remove competing plants around the acacia cutting off the offending plants leaves with their jaws and ultimately killing them Other associated ant species appear to do nothing to benefit their hosts Similar mutualisms with ants occur on Acacia trees in Africa such as the whistling thorn acacia The acacias provide shelter for ants in similar swollen stipules and nectar in extrafloral nectaries for their symbiotic ants such as Crematogaster mimosae In turn the ants protect the plant by attacking large mammalian herbivores and stem boring beetles that damage the plant 19 The predominantly herbivorous spider Bagheera kiplingi which is found in Central America and Mexico feeds on nubs at the tips of the acacia leaves known as Beltian bodies which contain high concentrations of protein These nubs are produced by the acacia as part of a symbiotic relationship with certain species of ant which also eat them 20 Pests editIn Australia Acacia species are sometimes used as food plants by the larvae of hepialid moths of the genus Aenetus including A ligniveren These burrow horizontally into the trunk then vertically down Other Lepidoptera larvae which have been recorded feeding on Acacia include brown tail Endoclita malabaricus and turnip moth The leaf mining larvae of some bucculatricid moths also feed on Acacia Bucculatrix agilis feeds exclusively on Acacia horrida and Bucculatrix flexuosa feeds exclusively on Acacia nilotica Acacias contain a number of organic compounds that defend them from pests and grazing animals 21 Uses editUse as human food edit nbsp Acacia dealbata seeds Acacia seeds are often used for food and a variety of other products In Myanmar Laos and Thailand the feathery shoots of Acacia pennata common name cha om chaxm and su pout ywet in Burmese are used in soups curries omelettes and stir fries Gum edit Various species of acacia yield gum True gum arabic is the product of Acacia senegal abundant in dry tropical West Africa from Senegal to northern Nigeria Acacia nilotica syn Acacia arabica is the gum arabic tree of India but yields a gum inferior to the true gum arabic Gum arabic is used in a wide variety of food products including some soft drinks 22 and confections The ancient Egyptians used acacia gum in paints 23 nbsp Sap from which gum can be made oozing from an Acacia tree in Phoenix Arizona The gum of Acacia xanthophloea and Acacia karroo has a high sugar content and is sought out by the lesser bushbaby Acacia karroo gum was once used for making confectionery and traded under the name Cape Gum It was also used medicinally to treat cattle suffering poisoning by Moraea species 24 Uses in folk medicine edit Acacia species have possible uses in folk medicine A 19th century Ethiopian medical text describes a potion made from an Ethiopian species known as grar mixed with the root of the tacha then boiled as a cure for rabies 25 An astringent medicine high in tannins called catechu or cutch is procured from several species but more especially from Senegalia catechu syn Acacia catechu by boiling down the wood and evaporating the solution so as to get an extract 26 27 The catechu extract from A catechu figures in the history of chemistry in giving its name to the catechin catechol and catecholamine chemical families ultimately derived from it Ornamental uses edit A few species are widely grown as ornamentals in gardens the most popular perhaps is A dealbata silver wattle with its attractive glaucous to silvery leaves and bright yellow flowers it is erroneously known as mimosa in some areas where it is cultivated through confusion with the related genus Mimosa Another ornamental acacia is the fever tree Southern European florists use A baileyana A dealbata A pycnantha and A retinodes as cut flowers and the common name there for them is mimosa 28 Ornamental species of acacias are also used by homeowners and landscape architects for home security The sharp thorns of some species are a deterrent to trespassing and may prevent break ins if planted under windows and near drainpipes The aesthetic characteristics of acacia plants in conjunction with their home security qualities makes them a reasonable alternative to constructed fences and walls Perfume edit nbsp Acacia farnesiana Acacia farnesiana is used in the perfume industry due to its strong fragrance The use of acacia as a fragrance dates back centuries Symbolism and ritual edit nbsp Egyptian goddess Isis Egyptian mythology has associated the acacia tree with characteristics of the tree of life such as in the Myth of Osiris and Isis Several parts mainly bark root and resin of Acacia species are used to make incense for rituals Acacia is used in incense mainly in India Nepal and China including in its Tibet region Smoke from acacia bark is thought to keep demons and ghosts away and to put the gods in a good mood Roots and resin from acacia are combined with rhododendron acorus cytisus salvia and some other components of incense Both people and elephants like an alcoholic beverage made from acacia fruit 29 According to Easton s Bible Dictionary the acacia tree may be the burning bush Exodus 3 2 which Moses encountered in the desert 30 Also when God gave Moses the instructions for building the Tabernacle he said to make an ark and a table of acacia wood Exodus 25 10 amp 23 Revised Standard Version Also in the Christian tradition Christ s crown of thorns is thought to have been woven from acacia 31 Acacia was used for Zulu warriors iziQu or isiKu beads which passed on through Robert Baden Powell to the Scout movement s Wood Badge training award 32 In Russia Italy and other countries it is customary to present women with yellow mimosas among other flowers on International Women s Day March 8 These mimosas may be from A dealbata silver wattle In 1918 May Gibbs the popular Australian children s author wrote the book Wattle Babies in which a third person narrator describes the lives of imaginary inhabitants of the Australian forests the bush The main characters are the Wattle Babies who are tiny people that look like acacia flowers and who interact with various forest creatures Gibbs wrote Wattle Babies are the sunshine of the Bush In Winter when the sky is grey and all the world seems cold they put on their yellowest clothes and come out for they have such cheerful hearts 33 Gibbs was referring to the fact that an abundance of acacias flower in August in Australia in the midst of the southern hemisphere winter 34 Tannin edit The bark of various Australian species known as wattles is very rich in tannin and forms an important article of export important species include A pycnantha golden wattle A decurrens tan wattle A dealbata silver wattle and A mearnsii black wattle Black wattle is grown in plantations in South Africa and South America The pods of A nilotica under the name of neb neb and of other African species are also rich in tannin and used by tanners In Yemen the principal tannin substance was derived from the leaves of the salam tree Acacia etbaica a tree known locally by the name qaraẓ garadh 35 36 A bath solution of the crushed leaves of this tree into which raw leather had been inserted for prolonged soaking would take only 15 days for curing The water and leaves however required changing after seven or eight days and the leather needed to be turned over daily Wood edit nbsp Acacia koa wood Some Acacia species are valuable as timber such as A melanoxylon blackwood from Australia which attains a great size its wood is used for furniture and takes a high polish and A omalophylla myall wood also Australian which yields a fragrant timber used for ornaments A seyal is thought to be the shittah tree of the Bible which supplied shittim wood According to the Book of Exodus this was used in the construction of the Ark of the Covenant A koa from the Hawaiian Islands and A heterophylla from Reunion are both excellent timber trees Depending on abundance and regional culture some Acacia species e g A fumosa are traditionally used locally as firewoods 37 It is also used to make homes for different animals nbsp A heterophylla wood Pulpwood edit In Indonesia mainly in Sumatra and in Malaysia mainly in Sabah plantations of A mangium are being established to supply pulpwood to the paper industry Acacia wood pulp gives high opacity and below average bulk paper This is suitable in lightweight offset papers used for Bibles and dictionaries It is also used in paper tissue where it improves softness Land reclamation edit Acacias can be planted for erosion control especially after mining or construction damage 38 Ecological invasion editFor the same reasons it is favored as an erosion control plant with its easy spreading and resilience some varieties of acacia are potentially invasive species At least fourteen Acacia species introduced to South Africa are categorized as invasive due to their naturally aggressive propagation 39 citation needed One of the most globally significant invasive acacias is black wattle A mearnsii which is taking over grasslands and abandoned agricultural areas worldwide especially in moderate coastal and island regions where mild climate promotes its spread Australian New Zealand Weed Risk Assessment gives it a high risk score of 15 rating and it is considered one of the world s 100 most invasive species 40 Extensive ecological studies should be performed before further introduction of acacia varieties as this fast growing genus once introduced spreads quickly and is extremely difficult to eradicate Phytochemistry editCyanogenic glycosides edit Nineteen different species of Acacia in the Americas contain cyanogenic glycosides which if exposed to an enzyme which specifically splits glycosides can release hydrogen cyanide HCN in the leaves 41 This sometimes results in the poisoning death of livestock If fresh plant material spontaneously produces 200 ppm or more HCN then it is potentially toxic This corresponds to about 7 5 mmol HCN per gram of fresh plant material It turns out that if acacia leaves lack the specific glycoside splitting enzyme then they may be less toxic than otherwise even those containing significant quantities of cyanic glycosides 42 Some Acacia species containing cyanogens include Acacia erioloba A cunninghamii A obtusifolia A sieberiana and A sieberiana var woodii 43 Famous acacias editThe Arbre du Tenere in Niger was the most isolated tree in the world about 400 km 249 mi from any other tree The tree was knocked down by a truck driver in 1973 44 In Nairobi Kenya the Thorn Tree Cafe is named after a Naivasha thorn tree Acacia xanthophloea 45 in its centre Travelers used to pin notes to others to the thorns of the tree The current tree is the third of the same variety References edit Genus Acacia Mill Germplasm Resources Information Network GRIN Carruthers Jane Robin Libby February 2010 Taxonomic imperialism in the battles for Acacia Identity and science in South Africa and Australia Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa 65 1 48 64 Bibcode 2010TRSSA 65 48C doi 10 1080 00359191003652066 S2CID 83630585 a b Thiele Kevin R Fnk Vicki A Iwatsuki Kunio Morat Philippe Peng Ching I Raven Peter Sarukhan Jose Seberg Ole February 2011 The controversy over the retypification of Acacia Mill with an Australian type A pragmatic view PDF Taxon 60 1 194 198 doi 10 1002 tax 601017 ISSN 0040 0262 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 6 November 2015 Acacia nilotica acacia Plants amp Fungi Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Archived from the original on 2010 01 12 Retrieved 28 January 2010 Quattrocchi Umberto 2000 CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names Vol 1 A C CRC Press p 6 ISBN 978 0 8493 2675 2 a b Maslin Bruce R 2004 Classification and phylogeny ofAcacia In Evolution of ecological and behavioural diversity Australian Acacia thrips as model organisms Australian Biological Resources Study and Australian National Insect Collection CSIRO pp 97 112 Retrieved 5 November 2015 a b Boland D J 2006 Forest trees of Australia 5th ed Collingwood Vic CSIRO Publ u a p 127 ISBN 978 0 643 06969 5 a b Gideon F Smith Estrela Figueiredo 2011 Conserving Acacia Mill with a conserved type What happened in Melbourne Taxon 60 5 1504 1506 doi 10 1002 tax 605033 hdl 2263 17733 Christian Kull Haripriya Rangan 2012 Science sentiment and territorial chauvinism in the acacia name change debate PDF Terra Australis 34 197 219 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved September 29 2015 Anders Backlund Kare Bremer 1998 To be or not to be principles of classification and monotypic plant families Taxon 47 2 391 400 doi 10 2307 1223768 JSTOR 1223768 Anastasia Thanukos 2009 A name by any other tree Evolution Education and Outreach 2 2 303 309 doi 10 1007 s12052 009 0122 7 Wattles genus Acacia Australian National Herbarium Archived from the original on August 2 2018 Retrieved October 24 2013 The Acacia debate PDF IBC2011 Congress News Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved May 5 2016 Conserving Acacia Mill with a conserved type What happened in Melbourne Taxon Retrieved May 5 2016 Bouchenak Khelladi Yanis Maurin Olivier Hurter Johan van der Bank Michelle November 2010 The evolutionary history and biogeography of Mimosoideae Leguminosae An emphasis on African acacias Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 57 2 495 508 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2010 07 019 PMID 20696261 Singh Gurcharan 2004 Plant Systematics An Integrated Approach Science Publishers p 445 ISBN 978 1 57808 351 0 J Clemens PG Jones NH Gilbert 1977 Effect of seed treatments on germination in Acacia Australian Journal of Botany 25 3 269 276 doi 10 1071 BT9770269 Heil Martin Sabine Greiner Harald Meimberg Ralf Kruger Jean Louis Noyer Gunther Heubl K Eduard Linsenmair Wilhelm Boland 2004 Evolutionary change from induced to constitutive expression of an indirect plant resistance Nature 430 6996 205 208 Bibcode 2004Natur 430 205H doi 10 1038 nature02703 PMID 15241414 S2CID 4416036 Palmer T M M L Stanton T P Young J R Goheen R M Pringle R Karban January 2008 Breakdown of an ant plant mutualism following the loss of large herbivores from an African savanna Science 319 5860 192 195 Bibcode 2008Sci 319 192P doi 10 1126 science 1151579 PMID 18187652 S2CID 32467164 Meehan Christopher J Olson Eric J Curry Robert L 21 August 2008 Exploitation of the Pseudomyrmex Acacia mutualism by a predominantly vegetarian jumping spider Bagheera kiplingi Archived 2019 12 01 at the Wayback Machine The 93rd ESA Annual Meeting T D A Forbes B A Clement Chemistry of Acacia s from South Texas PDF Texas A amp M University Archived from the original PDF on May 15 2011 Retrieved June 12 2013 Powerade Ion4 Sports Drink B Vitamin Enhanced Strawberry Lemonade Wegmans Archived from the original on 2012 02 15 Retrieved 2013 03 06 Excerpt from A Consumer s Dictionary of Cosmetic Ingredients Fifth Edition Paperback Amazon com Amazon ca Retrieved 2013 03 06 Vachellia karroo PlantZAfrica com Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2015 05 20 Richard Pankhurst An Introduction to the Medical History of Ethiopia Trenton Red Sea Press 1990 p 97 An OCR d version of the US Dispensatory by Remington and Wood 1918 Henriettesherbal com Retrieved 2013 03 06 Cutch and catechu plant origin from the Food and Agriculture FAO department of the United Nations Document repository accessed November 5 2011 Archived from the original on February 10 2019 Retrieved November 5 2011 World Wide Wattle World Wide Wattle 2009 09 07 Retrieved 2013 03 06 Naturheilpraxis Fachforum German Easton s Bible Dictionary Bush Eastonsbibledictionary com Retrieved 2013 03 06 Dictionary of Symbols Chevalier and Gheerbrant Penguin Reference 1996 The Origins of the Wood Badge PDF The Scout Association Archived from the original PDF on 6 October 2013 Retrieved 16 February 2019 May Gibbs Wattle Babies Mitchell Library State Library of New South Wales Retrieved 30 May 2019 Costermans Leon F 1981 Native Trees and Shrubs of South Eastern Australia Includes Addendum of Change and New Species Adelaide South Australia Rigby ISBN 0727017993 R Moses b Maimon RESPONSA ed Jehoshua Blau vol 2 responsum 253 Rubin Mass Ltd Jerusalem 1989 p 298 s v Judeo Arabic original אלקרץ James P Mandaville Bedouin Ethnobotany Plant Concepts and Uses in a Desert Pastoral World University of Arizona Press 2011 p 140 ISBN 978 0 8165 2900 1 Maugh T H II 2009 04 24 New species of tree identified in Ethiopia Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2008 04 24 Barr D A Atkinson W J 1970 Stabilization of coastal sands after mining J Soil Conserv Serv N S W 26 89 105 van Wilgen Brian 2011 National scale strategic approaches for managing introduced plants Insights from Australian acacias in South Africa Diversity and Distributions 17 5 1060 1075 doi 10 1111 j 1472 4642 2011 00785 x hdl 10019 1 112287 JSTOR 41242842 S2CID 85828367 via JSTOR Acacia mearnsii PIER species info Hear org Archived from the original on 2010 09 08 Retrieved 2013 03 06 Seigler David S 1987 Cyanogenic Glycosides in Ant Acacias of Mexico and Central America The Southwestern Naturalist 32 4 499 503 doi 10 2307 3671484 JSTOR 3671484 Hegnauer R 1996 01 01 Chemotaxonomie der Pflanzen By Robert Hegnauer Springer ISBN 9783764351656 Retrieved 2013 03 06 FAO Kamal M Ibrahim The current state of knowledge on Prosopis juliflora Archived October 18 2012 at the Wayback Machine Michael Palin Sahara Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 2978 6359 5 Jan Hemsing 1974 Old Nairobi and the New Stanley Hotel Church Raitt and Associates p 53 Further reading editClement B A Goff C M Forbes T D A 1998 Toxic Amines and Alkaloids from Acacia rigidula Phytochemistry 49 5 1377 1380 Bibcode 1998PChem 49 1377C doi 10 1016 s0031 9422 97 01022 4 Schindler Jason R Fulbright Timothy E Forbes T D A 2004 Long term effects of roller chopping on antiherbivore defenses in three shrub species Journal of Arid Environments 56 1 181 192 Bibcode 2004JArEn 56 181S doi 10 1016 S0140 1963 03 00020 X Shulgin Alexander and Ann TiHKAL the Continuation Transform Press 1997 ISBN 978 0 9630096 9 2External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Acacia World Wide Wattle Acacia world Wayne s Word on The Unforgettable Acacias The genus Acacia and Entheogenic Tryptamines with reference to Australian and related species by mulga A description of Acacia from Pomet s 1709 reference book History of Druggs Archived 2010 01 11 at the Wayback Machine Dr Duke s Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases Flora identification tools from the State Herbarium of South Australia Tannins in Some Interrelated Wattles List of Acacia Species in the U S permanent dead link FAO Timber Properties of Various Acacia Species FAO Comparison of Various Acacia Species as Forage Vet Path ResultsAFIP Wednesday Slide Conference No 21 February 24 1999 Acacia cyanophylla lindl as supplementary feed for small stock in Libya Description of Acacia Morphology Nitrogen Fixation in Acacias Acacias with Cyagenic Compounds Acacia Alarm System Acacia in West African plants A Photo Guide Acacia Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Acacia sensu lato amp oldid 1215805189, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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