Acacia tree
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''Acacia'', commonly known as the wattles or acacias, is a large genus of shrubs and trees in the subfamily Mimosoideae of the pea family Fabaceae. Initially, it comprised a group of plant species native to Africa and Australasia. The genus name is New Latin, borrowed from the Greek (), a term used by Pedanius Dioscorides, Dioscorides for a preparation extracted from the leaves and fruit pods of ''Vachellia nilotica'', the original type of the genus. In his ''Pinax'' (1623), Gaspard Bauhin mentioned the Greek from Dioscorides as the origin of the Latin name. In the early 2000s it had become evident that the genus as it stood was not Monophyly, monophyletic and that several divergent lineages needed to be placed in separate genera. It turned out that one lineage comprising over 900 species mainly native to Australia, New Guinea, and Indonesia was not closely related to the much smaller group of African lineage that contained ''A. nilotica''—the type species. This meant that the Australasian lineage (by far the most prolific in number of species) would need to be renamed. Botanist Leslie Pedley named this group ''Racosperma'', which received little acclaim in the botanical community. Australian botanists proposed a less disruptive solution setting a different type species for ''Acacia'' (''Acacia penninervis, A. penninervis'') and allowing this largest number of species to remain in ''Acacia'', resulting in the two Pan-Tropical lineages being renamed ''Vachellia'' and ''Senegalia'', and the two endemic American lineages renamed ''Acaciella'' and ''Mariosousa''. Although many botanists still disagreed that this was necessary, this solution was eventually officially adopted at the Melbourne International Botanical Congress in 2011. Acacia remains a widely used common name across genera. A number of species have been introduced to various parts of the world, and two million hectares of commercial plantations have been established. The heterogeneous group varies considerably in habit, from mat-like subshrubs to canopy trees in a forest.


Description

Several species in the genus bear vertically oriented Petiole (botany), phyllodes, which are green, broadened leaf petioles that function like leaf blades, an adaptation to hot climates and droughts. Some phyllodinous species have a colourful aril on the seed. A few species have Phylloclade, cladodes rather than leaves.


Taxonomy

The genus was first validly named in 1754 by Philip Miller. In 1913 Nathaniel Lord Britton and Addison Brown selected ''Mimosa scorpioides'' (≡ ''Acacia scorpioides'' () = ''Vachellia nilotica, Acacia nilotica'' () ), a species from Africa, as the lectotype of the name. The genus as recognized in 1986 contained 1352 species. That year however, Pedley published a paper in which he questioned the Monophyly, monophyletic nature of the genus, and proposed a split into three genera: ''Acacia'' sensu stricto (161 species), ''Senegalia'' (231 species) and ''Racosperma'' (960 species), the last name first proposed in 1829 by Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius as the name of a section in ''Acacia'', but raised to generic rank in 1835. In 2003, Pedley published a paper with 834 new combinations in ''Racosperma'' for species, most of which were formerly placed in ''Acacia''. All but 10 of these species are native to Australasia, where it constitutes the largest plant genus. In 2003, Anthony Orchard and Bruce Maslin filed a proposal to conserve the name ''Acacia'' with a different Type (biology), type in order to retain the Australasian group of species in the genus ''Acacia''. Following a controversial decision to choose a new type for ''Acacia'' in 2005, the Australian component of ''Acacia s.l.'' now retains the name ''Acacia''. At the 2011 International Botanical Congress held in Melbourne, the decision to use the name ''Acacia'', rather than the proposed ''Racosperma'' for this genus, was upheld. Other ''Acacia sensu lato, Acacia s.l.'' taxa continue to be called ''Acacia'' by those who choose to consider the entire group as one genus. Australian species of the genus ''Paraserianthes'' ''sensu lato, s.l.'' are deemed its closest relatives, particularly ''Paraserianthes lophantha, P. lophantha''. The nearest relatives of ''Acacia'' and ''Paraserianthes s.l.'' in turn include the Australian and South East Asian genera ''Archidendron'', ''Archidendropsis'', ''Pararchidendron'' and ''Wallaceodendron'', all of the tribe Ingeae.


Etymology

The origin of "Wattle (construction), wattle" may be an Proto-Germanic language, Old Teutonic word meaning "to weave". From around 700 CE, ' was used in Old English to refer to the interwoven branches and sticks which formed fences, walls and roofs. Since about 1810 it refers to the Australian legumes that provide these branches.


Species

One species of ''Acacia'' (''sensu stricto'') is native to Madagascar, one to Reunion island, 12 to Asia, and the remaining species (over 900) are native to Australasia and the Pacific Islands. These species were all given combinations by Pedley when he erected the genus ''Racosperma'', hence ''Acacia pulchella'', for example, became ''Racosperma pulchellum''. However, these were not upheld with the retypification of ''Acacia''.


Phylogeny

Acacias in Australia probably evolved their fire resistance about 20 million years ago when fossilised charcoal deposits show a large increase, indicating that fire was a factor even then. With no major mountain ranges or rivers to prevent their spread, the wattles began to spread all over the continent as it dried and fires became more common. They began to form dry, open forests with species of the genera ''Allocasuarina'', ''Eucalyptus'' and ''Callitris'' (cypress-pines). The southernmost species in the genus are ''Acacia dealbata'' (silver wattle), ''Acacia longifolia'' (coast wattle or Sydney golden wattle), ''Acacia mearnsii'' (black wattle), and ''Acacia melanoxylon'' (blackwood), reaching 43°30' S in Tasmania, Australia.


Fossil record

An ''Acacia''-like long fossil seed pod has been described from the Eocene of the Paris Basin. ''Acacia''-like fossil pods under the name ''Leguminocarpon'' are known from late Oligocene deposits at different sites in Hungary. Seed pod fossils of †''Acacia parschlugiana'' and †''Acacia cyclosperma'' are known from Tertiary deposits in Switzerland. †''Acacia colchica'' has been described from the Miocene of West Georgia (country), Georgia. Pliocene fossil pollen of an ''Acacia'' sp. has been described from West Georgia (country), Georgia (including Abkhazia). Oldest records of fossil ''Acacia'' pollen in Australia are from the late Oligocene epoch, 25 million years ago.


Distribution and habitat

They are present in all terrestrial habitats, including alpine settings, rainforests, woodlands, grasslands, coastal dunes and deserts. In drier woodlands or forests they are an important component of the understory. Elsewhere they may be dominant, as in the Brigalow Belt, Myall Lakes National Park, Myall woodlands and the Eremaean province, eremaean Acacia aneura, Mulga woodlands. In Australia, ''Acacia'' forest is the second most common forest type after Eucalyptus, eucalypt forest, covering or 8% of total forest area. ''Acacia'' is also the nation's largest genus of flowering plants with almost 1,000 species found.


Ecology

Acacia is a common food source and host plant for butterflies of the genus ''Jalmenus.'' The imperial hairstreak, ''Jalmenus evagoras,'' feeds on at least 25 acacia species. Many reptiles feed on the sap as well, such as the Dubious dtella, native house gecko in Australia.


Toxicity

Some species of acacia contain List of Acacia species known to contain psychoactive alkaloids, psychoactive alkaloids, and some contain potassium fluoroacetate, a rodent poison.


Uses

The seed pods, flowers, and young leaves are generally edible either raw or cooked. Aboriginal Australians have traditionally harvested the seeds of some species, to be ground into flour and eaten as a paste or baked into a cake. The seeds contain as much as 25% more protein than common cereals, and they store well for long periods due to the hard seed coats. In addition to utilizing the edible seed and gum, the people employed the timber for implements, weapons, fuel and musical instruments. A number of species, most notably ''Acacia mangium, A. mangium'' (hickory wattle), ''Acacia mearnsii, A. mearnsii'' (black wattle) and ''Acacia saligna, A. saligna'' (coojong), are economically important and are widely planted globally for wood products, tannin, firewood and fodder. ''A. melanoxylon'' (blackwood) and ''A. aneura'' (mulga) supply some of the most attractive timbers in the genus. Black wattle bark supported the Tanning (leather), tanning industries of several countries, and may supply tannins for production of waterproof adhesives. Wattle bark collected in Australia in the 19th century was exported to Europe where it was used in the tanning (leather), tanning process. One ton of wattle or mimosa bark contained about of pure tannin. In ancient Egypt, an ointment made from the ground leaves of an Acacia (sensu lato) was used to treat hemorrhoids. The hardened sap of various species of the acacia tree (sensu lato) are known as acacia gum. Acacia gum is used as an emulsifier in food, a binder for watercolour painting, an additive to ceramic glazes, a binding in gum printing, gum bichromate photography, a protective layer in the lithography, lithographic processes and as a binder to bind together fireworks. "Acacia honey" is not collected from plants in the acacia family, but rather from ''Robinia pseudoacacia'', known as black locust in North America. Honey collected from ''Caragana arborescens'' is sometimes also called (yellow) acacia honey. (See also Monofloral honey.)


Cultivation

Some species of acacia – notably Acacia baileyana, ''A. baileyana'', ''Acacia dealbata, A. dealbata'' and ''Acacia pravissima, A. pravissima'' – are cultivated as ornamental garden plants. The 1889 publication ''Useful Native Plants of Australia'' describes various uses for eating.


In culture

Acacia is mentioned in an ancient Egyptian proverb referred to by Amenhotep II: "If you lack a gold battle-axe inlaid with bronze, a heavy club of acacia wood will do."Erik Hornung 'The Pharaoh' in Sergio Donadoni, The Egyptians, The University of Chicago Press, 1997. p. 291 Acacia (sensu lato) is repeatedly mentioned in the Book of Exodus, perhaps referring to ''Vachellia tortilis'' (previously known as ''Acacia raddiana''), in regards to the construction of the Tabernacle. In Book of Exodus, Exodus 25:10, acacia wood is mentioned as the construction material for the Ark of the Covenant.


References

* Pedley, L. (2002). "A conspectus of ''Acacia'' subgen. ''Acacia'' in Australia". ''Austrobaileya'' 6(2): 177–186. * Pedley, L. (2003). A synopsis of ''Racosperma'' C.Mart". ''Austrobaileya'' 6(3): 445–496.


External links


WATTLE Acacias of Australia Lucid Web Player (multi-access key for identifying Australian Acacias)
{{Authority control Acacia, Fabaceae genera Mimosoids