Taxonomic Revision of the Ant-Acacias (Fabaceae, Mimosoideae, Acacia, Series Gummiferae) of the New World
Author
David S. Seigler
Author
John E. Ebinger
text
Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden
1995
82
117
138
http://www.jstor.org/stable/2399983
journal article
antacacia2399983
http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2399983
6.
Acacia gentlei Stand.
,
Publ. Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Bot. Ser. 22: 77. 1940
. TYPE:
Belize
.
P. Gentle
185
(
holotype
,
F
)
.
Small tree to
20 m
tall; young twigs dark reddish brown, densely puberulent. Stipular spines dull, red to dark brown, most commonly black, usually lightly puberulent, terete, commonly symmetrical to slightly asymmetrical, U-shaped with an angle of 30 to 60°, suberect to recurved around the stem,
35-80 mm
long,
3.5-6 mm
thick near the base. Leaves
70-180 mm
long; pinnae 5-12 pairs per leaf,
55-90 mm
long,
13-20 mm
between pinna pairs; rachis grooved, puberulent, a narrow, volcano-shaped gland located on the rachis internodes between each pinna pair; petiole grooved, densely puberulent,
9-20 mm
long. Petiolar glands narrowly volcano-shaped, usually laterally compressed, solitary (rarely 2), puberulent, lightly striate, apex
0.6-1.2 mm
across, base
2-3 mm
long, located near the base to middle of the petiole. Leaflets 20-35 pairs per pinna, glabrous, linear,
7-14 mm
long,
1.8-3.1 mm
wide, lateral veins obvious, 3-5 veins from the base, apex obtuse to acute, margins ciliate. Inflorescence a densely flowered, cylindrical spike
15-40 mm
long,
4-6 mm
thick, nearly the same thickness throughout, apex blunt, in racemes on fertile branchlets with usually one (occasionally 2-4) spike at a node in the axil of a reduced leaf; peduncles puberulent,
16-22 mm
long,
0.7-1.1 mm
thick, nearly the same thickness throughout; involucre located near the middle of the peduncle, puberulent, 4-lobed with 2 lobes longer. Floral bracts peltate, apex circular, puberulent, the stalk less than
1 mm
long. Flowers sessile; calyx 5-lobed, puberulent,
0.5-0.8 mm
long; corolla 5-lobed, puberulent, yellowish,
1.3-1.8 mm
long, twice as long as the calyx. Legumes straight to slightly curved, flattened,
160-300 mm
long,
9-14 mm
wide, glabrous, longitudinally striate, black to dark brown, dehiscent along both sutures, stipe
10-30 mm
long, the apex narrowing to a spikelike beak
10-40 mm
long. Flowering January-May.
Distribution. Rainforests, wet successional areas where the vegetation is 15-20 years of age, wet disturbed sites, swamps, and river edge vegetation in the lowlands of Belize, northern Guatemala, and extreme southern Mexico.
Representative specimens.
BELIZE
.
3-6 mi
. S of Belmopan
,
Dwyer
12544
(
F
,
GH
,
MO
)
;
Southern Hwy.,
14 mi
. N of Punta Gorda, San Antonio
,
Gentry
8072
(
MEX
,
MO
)
;
Maskall
,
Gentle
1121
(
F
,
GH
,
MICH
,
MO
,
NY
)
;
Hummingbird Hwy.
,
Gentle
9078
(
F
,
MICH
,
MO
,
NY
)
;
Mountain Pine Ridge, Blancaneaux Lodge
,
Wiley
457
(
MO
)
.
GUATEMALA
.
Alla Verapaz
:
along Rio Sebol between Sebol and Carrizal, N of Sebol
,
200-300 m
,
Steyermark
45762
(
F
)
.
Izabal
:
El Zapotillo
,
1 km
E El Estor (Lake Izabal)
,
Janzen
657
(
F
,
GH
,
MEX
,
MICH
,
MO
,
US
)
.
El
Peten
:
Uaxactun
,
Bartlett
12578
(
NY
,
TEX
,
UC
)
.
Tikal National Park, Tikal, in ramonal
,
Ibarra
16
(
LL
)
.
MEXICO
.
Chiapas
:
a
3 km
al S de Frontera Corozal, sobre el Rio Usumacinta
,
120 m
,
Martinez S.
11433
(
MEX
,
MO
,
NY
)
.
Quintana Roo
:
a
2 km
al N de Estero Franco, carretera Chetumal-La
Union
,
Cabrera & Cabrera
2512
(
MEX
,
MO
)
.
Tabasco
:
Carretera W-O por El Poblado de Apatzingan,
Balancan
,
150 m
,
Calzada
2345
(
F
,
MEX
,
MO
)
.
Acacia gentlei
is a common species in wet sites at lower elevations in Belize, Guatemala, and extreme southeastern Mexico. It is distinguished easily from all other ant-acacias by the combination of its elongate inflorescence, laterally compressed, volcano-shaped glands scattered along the leaf rachis, very thin spines (usually less than
6 mm
thick), and relatively large leaflets (
7-14 mm
long) with obvious secondary veins.
Unlike many of the wet forest ant-acacias,
Acacia gentlei
is a common species in areas of human
disturbance
. It appears as a successional species after logging, and in many parts of its range is found along roadsides. Unlike most wet forest ant-acacias, it has relatively large Beltian bodies (
1-2 mm
long) on most of the leaflets. Like most of the other ant-acacias, it usually lacks cyanogenic glycosides in the leaflets. Of the specimens examined, only one, Lundell 16903, from Guatemala, was weakly cyanogenic.