helloplants.org

Acacia macrothyrsa

Family: Fabaceae


What it is like

A shrub or small tree. It grows 5 m tall. There are prickles along the stem. The leaves are twice divided and there are 8-18 pairs of pinnae. There are up to 50 pairs of pinnules on each pinnae. The flowers are yellow. They are in large clusters at the ends of branches. The pods are flattened.

There are about 1,350 Acacia species. Over 1,000 occur in Australia. Also as Mimosaceae.


Where it is found

It is a tropical plant. It grows in woodland at 1,200-1,500 m altitude. It grows in the Sahel. It can grow in arid places.

Countries/locations it is found in

Africa, Central Africa, Congo, East Africa, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, Sahel, Tanzania, Uganda, West Africa, Zambia, Zimbabwe


How it is used for food

The leaves are cooked and eaten.

Edible parts

Leaves


How it is grown


Its other names

Local names

Cangando, Chinyajwe, Chipeta, Chirima, Nafungwe, Nivunha

Synonyms

Acacia buchanani Harms; Acacia dalzielii Craib.; Acacia prorsispinnata Stapf.;