Overview of the generic status of Acacia (Leguminosae: Mimosoideae)
Author
Maslin, B. R.
Author
Miller, J. T.
Author
Seigler, D. S.
text
Australian Systematic Botany
2003
2003-12-31
16
1
18
journal article
28558
10.1071/SB02008
131de7e0-3e87-48e0-bd89-6a3c4c462b03
2561370
Acacia
subg.
Aculeiferum
sens. str.
(
Fig. 5
)
A cosmopolitan group containing about 203 species (
Table 1
) that are distributed as follows:
New World
—97 species (plus about another 20 as yet undescribed) (D. S. Seigler, unpubl. data).
Africa
(including Madagascar)— 69 species [species numbers derived from information presented in
Ross (1979)
,
Thulin and Tardelli (1988)
,
Lock (1989)
,
Thulin (1989)
,
Thulin and Hassan (1990)
, and
Du Puy and Villiers (2002)
].
Asia
(including about seven species that occur also in Africa)—43 species [species numbers derived from information presented in
Ali (1973)
,
Lock and Simpson (1991)
,
Nielsen (1992)
,
Lock and Heald (1994)
, S. Kumar and P. V. Sane (unpubl. data), and D. S. Seigler (unpubl. data)].
Australia
(including
A
.
pennata
subsp.
kerrii
, which extends to Asia) – 2 species (species number from
Ross 2001
).
If treated as a distinct genus, the name
Senegalia
would apply to this subgenus.
Acacia
subg.
Aculeiferum
sens. str. may be characterised in the following ways (see
Table 4
for further details): Trees or shrubs, often scandent. Prickles usually present, recurved or straight, scattered or 1–3 at nodes. Stipules normally present and scarious, not spinose, often early deciduous. Leaves bipinnate, with 1–50 pairs of pinnae; leaflets 1–80 pairs, 3–80 mm long. Petiole nearly always glandular; glands single or multiple, usually small, not specialised, but occasionally modified. Inflorescence systems racemose, paniculate, fasciculate or simple; flowers arranged in globular or obloid heads or cylindrical spikes, cream-colored, pentamerous. Floral bracts linear to spatulate. Ovary on gynophore (0.4–2 mm long), with a nectariferous disk at the base of the ovary. Pods mostly dehiscent, chartaceous, some coriaceous, a few articulate. Funicle often arillate.
As discussed above, the exclusion of sect.
Filicinae
and the ‘
Acacia
coulteri
’ group from subg.
Aculeiferum
sens. lat. leaves a core group, subg.
Aculeiferum
sens. str., which is shown to be monophyletic in all cladistic studies and which is well-supported by bootstrap values.
Subgenus
Aculeiferum
sens. str. comprises two sections, sect.
Aculeiferum
(which appears to be confined to Africa and Asia) and sect.
Monacanthea
(which is pantropical). There are several characters that distinguish these two relatively large sections (
Vassal 1972
), including the number and placement of prickles and the nervation of stipules. Species of sect.
Aculeiferum
have prickles near the nodes, whereas those of sect.
Monacanthea
have prickles scattered along the stem. Recent evidence, however, suggests that these two sections are non-monophyletic, with a few taxa not grouping according to their sectional classification. These exceptions include
A
.
chariessa
,
A
.
riparia
,
A
.
gaumeri
,
A
.
persiciflora
and
A
.
ataxacantha
(
Robinson and Harris 2000
)
,
A
.
ataxacantha
(
Chappill and Maslin 1995
)
and
A
.
eriocarpa
(
Miller and Bayer
2003
)
.
Vassal (1972)
considered
A
.
ataxacantha
to be a member of sect.
Monacanthea
and
A
.
galpinii
to belong to sect.
Aculeiferum
. Although Vassal did not include
A
.
riparia
,
A
.
gaumeri
,
A
.
chariessa
or
A
.
eriocarpa
in his treatment, on the basis of their overall characters, they should fall into sect.
Monacanthea
, whereas
A
.
persiciflora
should be in sect.
Aculeiferum
.
Ross (1979)
noted that
A
.
eriocarpa
was one of four African species of sect.
Monacanthea
with spicate inflorescences, which differed from other African species (all of which have capitate inflorescences), in pollen, seed and seedling characters, as well as inflorescence structure.
Chappill and Maslin (1995)
showed that three African–Asian species of
Vassal’s (1972)
sect.
Aculeiferum
(
A
.
caffra
,
A
.
mellifera
and
A
.
senegal
), together with
A
.
ataxacantha
(which Vassal placed in sect.
Monacanthea
), formed a monophyletic group. Biochemical data from both
Evans
et al.
(1977)
and
Brain (1990)
have also shown
A
.
ataxacantha
to be atypical within sect.
Monacanthea
. These independent studies suggest parallel evolution of prickle and inflorescence type in subg.
Aculeiferum
sens. str. and indicate that further investigation within sections
Aculeiferum
and
Monacanthea
on a worldwide scale is needed in order to reassess the boundaries between them.
It is worth repeating here that sampling within subg.
Aculeiferum
sens. str. has been somewhat limited (see
Table 3
). It is therefore possible that future study of this group may identify additional monophyletic lineages that warrant generic recognition.