Online Encyclopedia

ACACIA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 97 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ACACIA  , a genus of shrubs and trees belonging to the

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family
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Leguminosae and the sub-family Mimoseae . The small flowers are arranged in rounded or elongated clusters . The leaves are compound pinnate in general (see fig.) . In some instances, however, more especially in the Australian
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species, the leaflets are suppressed and the leaf-stalks become vertically flattened,and serve the purpose of leaves . The vertical position protects the structure from the intense sunlight, as with their edges towards the sky and earth they do not intercept
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light so fully as ordinary horizontally placed leaves . There are about 450 species of acacia widely scattered over the warmer regions of the globe .. They abound in
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Australia and Africa . Various species yield gum . True gum-arabic is the product of Acacia
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Senegal, abundant in both east and west tropical Africa . Acacia ayabica is the gum-arabic tree of India, but yields a gum inferior to the true gum-arabic . An astringent
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medicine, called
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catechu (q.v.) or cutch, is procured from several species, but more especially from Acacia catechu, by boiling down the wood and evaporating the solution so as to get an extract . The bark of Acacia arabica, under the name of babul or babool, is used in Scinde for tanning: The bark of various Australian species, known as wattles, is also very rich in tannin and forms an important article of export .

Such are Acacia pycnantha,

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golden wattle, A. decurrens, tan wattle, and A. dealbata,
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silver wattle . The pods of Acacia nilotica, under the name of neb-neb, and of other
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African species Acacia Senegal, flowering branch, natural
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size (after A . Meyer and Schumann) . From Strasburger's Lehrbuch der Botanik . are also rich in tannin and used by tanners . The seeds of Acacia niopo are roasted and used as snuff in South
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America . Some species afford valuable
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timber; such are Acacia melanoxylon, black wood of Australia, which attains a
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great size; its wood is used for furniture, and takes a high
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polish ; and Acacia homalophylla (also Australian), myall wood, which yields a fragrant timber, used for ornamental purposes . Acacia formosa supplies the valuable Cuba timber called sabicu . Acacia seyal is supposed to be the shittah tree of the Bible, which supplied shittim-wood . Acacia heterophylla, from
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Mauritius and Bourbon; and Acacia hoe from the Sandwich Islands are also good timber trees . The
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plants often bear spines, especially those growing in arid districts in Australia or tropical and South Africa . These sometimes represent branches which have become short, hard and pungent, or sometimes leaf-stipules .

Acacia armata is the

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kangaroo-thorn of Australia, A. giraffae, the African camel-thorn . In the Central
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American Acacia sphaerocephala (bull-thorn acacia) and A. spadicigera, the large thorn-like stipules are hollow and afford shelter for ants, which feed on a secretion of honey on the leaf-stalk and curious food-bodies at the tips of the leaflets; in return they protect the plant against leaf-cutting
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insects . In
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common language the
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term Acacia is often applied to species of the genus
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Robinia (q.v.) which belongs also to the Leguminous family, but is placed in a different section . Robinia Pseud-acacia, or false acacia, is cultivated in the milder parts of Britain, and forms a large tree, with beautiful
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pea-like blossoms . The tree is sometimes called the
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locust tree .

End of Article: ACACIA
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