Acacia
sensu stricto
Wattle
sensu stricto
Wattle
Wikipedia links: Angiosperms > Eudicots > Rosids > Fagales > Fabeaceae > Acacia
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Common name: Wattle
The origin of "wattle" may be an Old Teutonic word meaning "to weave"
From around 700 CE, watul was used in Old English to refer to the flexible woody vines, branches, and sticks which were interwoven to form walls, roofs, and fences
Since about 1810 it has been used as the common name for the Australian legume trees and shrubs that can provide these branches
Conservation status: . . .
Etymology:
The genus name is from the Greek ἀκακία (akakia), a term used in antiquity to describe a preparation extracted from Vachellia nilotica, the original type species
The genus name is from acacis meaning "a point"
In his Pinax (1623), Bauhin mentioned the Greek ἀκακία from Dioscorides as the origin of the Latin name
Flowers:
The flowers are borne in spikes or cylindrical heads, sometimes singly, in pairs or in racemes in the axils of leaves or phyllodes, sometimes in panicles on the ends of branches.
Each spike or cylindrical head has many small golden-yellow to pale creamy-white flowers, each with 4 or 5 sepals and petals, more than 10 stamens, and a thread-like style that is longer than the stamens
Fruit:
The fruit is a variably-shaped pod, sometimes flat or cylindrical, containing seeds with a fleshy aril on the end
Leaves:
Bipinnate and the mature leaves sometimes reduced to phyllodes or rarely absent
There are 2 small stipules at the base of the leaf, but sometimes fall off as the leaf matures
Stem & branches:
Roots:
Habit:
Shrubs or trees
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 woodlands and the eremaean Mulga woodlands
Distribution:
Species of Acacia occurs in all Australian states and territories, and on its nearby islands
About 20 species occur naturally outside Australia and 7 of these also occur in Australia
One species (Acacia koa) is native to Hawaii and one (Acacia heterophylla) is native to Mauritius and Réunion in the Indian Ocean
In Australia, Acacia forest is the second most common forest type after eucalypt forest, covering 980,000 square kilometres or 8% of total forest area
Acacia is also the nation's largest genus of flowering plants with almost 1000 species found
Species:
World: 1084
Australia: > 1000
Additional notes:
Overview
Acacia, commonly known as wattles or acacias, is a genus of about 1,084 species of shrubs and trees in the subfamily Mimosoideae of the pea family Fabaceae
Initially, it comprised a group of plant species native to Africa, South America, and Australasia
It is now reserved for species mainly from Australia, with others from New Guinea, Southeast Asia, and the Indian Ocean
Taxonomy
The genus was first validly named in 1754 by Philip Miller in The Gardeners Dictionary
In 1913 Nathaniel Lord Britton and Addison Brown selected Mimosa scorpioides L. (≡ Acacia scorpioides (L.) W.Wight = Acacia nilotica (L.) Delille), a species from Africa, as the lectotype of the name
History
Genus Acacia was considered to contain some 1352 species leading to 1986
That year, Leslie Pedley questioned the 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 the early 2000s, it had become evident that the genus as it stood was not 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
Pedley's proposed name of Racosperma for this group had received little acclaim in the botanical community
Australian botanists proposed a less disruptive solution, setting a different type species for Acacia (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
In 2003, Anthony Orchard and Bruce Maslin filed a proposal to conserve the name Acacia with a different 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, Australia, the decision to use the name Acacia, rather than the proposed Racosperma for this genus, was upheld
Other Acacia s.l. taxa continue to be called Acacia by those who choose to consider the entire group as one genus
The Australian species of the genus Paraserianthes s.l. (namely P. lophantha) are deemed its closest relatives
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
Species
See also: List of Acacia species
There are about 1080 species of Acacia, mostly native to Australia
Fossil record
An Acacia-like 14 cm 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. Pliocene fossil pollen of an Acacia sp. has been described from West Georgia (including Abkhazia)
The oldest fossil Acacia pollen in Australia are recorded as being from the late Oligocene epoch, 25 million years ago
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.[33] Many reptiles feed on the sap, such as the native house gecko in Australia
The sap is also consumed by bugs (Hemiptera), such as Hackerobrachys viridiventris and Sextius virescens
Toxicity
Some species of acacia contain psychoactive alkaloids, and some contain potassium fluoroacetate
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
Wattleseeds 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 using the edible seed and gum, the people employed the timber for implements, weapons, fuel and musical instruments
A. melanoxylon (blackwood) and A. aneura (mulga) supply some of the most attractive timbers in the genus
A number of species of Acacia have been introduced to various parts of the world, and two million hectares of commercial plantations have been established
Black wattle bark supported the tanning industries of several countries, and may supply tannins for production of waterproof adhesives
A number of species, most notably Acacia mangium (hickory wattle), A. mearnsii (black wattle) and A. saligna (coojong), are economically important and are widely planted globally for wood products, tannin, firewood and fodder
In Vietnam, Acacia is used in plantations of non-native species that are regularly clear-cut for paper or timber uses
Wattle bark collected in Australia in the 19th century was exported to Europe where it was used in the tanning process; one ton of wattle or mimosa bark contained about 68 kilograms of pure tannin
Cultivation
Some species of acacia – notably Acacia baileyana, A. dealbata and A. pravissima – are cultivated as ornamental garden plants. The 1889 publication Useful Native Plants of Australia describes various uses for eating.
Sources of information: