Vachellia abyssinica explained

Vachellia abyssinica, the flat top acacia, is a tree up to 16 m tall.

Description

Its bark is reddish-brown on older trees. On younger trees it is pale yellowish-brown, peeling off in papery wads. Young twigs are softly hairy. Thorns are aligned in straight pairs at nodes. Leaves are in pinnae pairs of 20-40; the leaflets are very small, up to 4 × 0.75 mm. The inflorescence is arranged in white spherical heads. The involucel is located in the lower half of the peduncle. Seed pods are dehiscent.[1]

Distribution

From Ethiopia southwards to Zimbabwe and Mozambique and westwards to Angola.[2] [1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Details for: Vachellia abyssinica (as Acacia abyssinica). 2013-07-15. Encyclopedia of Life. eol.org. Encyclopedia of Life.
  2. Web site: Vachellia abyssinica (Hochst. ex Benth.) Kyal. & Boatwr. . Plants of the World Online . Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 2020-07-04 .