Difference between revisions of "Acacia brevispica (Bekele-Tesemma, 2007)"

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Revision as of 10:41, 3 August 2015

Acacia asak
Bekele-Tesemma, Useful trees and shrubs for Ethiopia, 2007
Acacia brevispica (Bekele-Tesemma, 2007)
Acacia bussei


Acacia brevispica

Fabaceae

Indigenous


Common names

  • English: Wait-a-bit thorn
  • Amargna: Kentefa, Kontevl, Mezazign
  • Borenagna: Gorgor, Hammaress
  • Oromugna: Amezaze, Hamarecha, Sokeusa, Qanter, Qwentr
  • Somaligna: Furgori, Qorqor
  • Wolaytgna: Gwemoriyya

Ecology

A common Acacia species in dry as well as semi-humid parts of Africa, from Ethiopia and Sudan south to South Africa. Found forming thickets together with other shrubs and trees in bushland. It grows well in Moist and Dry Kolla and Weyna Dega agroclimatic zones of Harerge, Bale, Welo, Sidamo, Gamo Gofa, Kefa and Shoa regions, 400–2,000 m.

Uses

Firewood, medicine (roots), fodder (pods and leaves), live fence.

Description

Sometimes a slender tree to 7 m but more often a shrub, forming thickets, or scrambling over other plants.

  • BARK: Light grey–pale brown; young stems green, hairy, often zigzag.
  • THORNS: Characteristic, small, single prickles, mostly hooked, scattered along the stems.
  • LEAVES: Compound, 5–20 pairs of pinnae, leaf stalk to 10 cm.
  • FLOWERS: Fragrant, yellowwhite in round heads on branching stalks to 10 cm. The shrub is very noticable when in flower over large areas.
  • FRUIT: Pods, usually straight to 15 cm, rough brown, thin, so seeds inside are visible, splits open easily on the tree.

Propagation

Seedlings, direct sowing at site.

Seed

7,000–9,000 seed per kg.

  • Treatment: Immerse in hot water, allow to cool and soak for 24 hours.
  • Storage: Seed stores well.

Management

Fairly fast growing. Coppicing. First height pruning and stem reduction helps to improve the stalk.

Remarks

Can be a troublesome weed in pasture. It commonly regenerates even after burning and clearing. However, it is a good fodder to fatten goats and cattle, which eat the young pods and leaves.