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Gum Arabic tree
Scientific name:
Acacia senegal
Order/Family:
Fabaceae
Local names:
Bajun(Mtengewa); Boran (Baabido); Daasanach (Dang'ite); Digo (Chikwata); Gabra (Idaado); Kamba (King'olola); Luhya (Kumung'ang'a); Luo(Otiep); Maasai (Enderkesi); Mbeere (Mung'ora); Orma (Bura diima); Pokot (Chemanga); Rendile (Mirgi); Samburu (Manok); Somali (Adad); Swahili (Kikwata, Mgunga); Teso (Ekodokodoi); Turkana (Ekunoit).
Introduction
General distribution:
It is native to Angola, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Kenya, Mali, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe. It is common in the dry parts of Africa and Asia. In Kenya, it is widespread in the ASALS of Kenya in dry Acacia-Commiphora bush land.
Distribution of Acacia senegal in Kenya
© Maundu P. and Bo Tengnas. (2005). Useful trees and shrubs for Kenya, World Agroforestry Centre.


Acacia senegal
© Franz Eugen Köhler, Köhler's Medizinal-Pflanzen, wikipedia
General information about the tree:
A. senegal has clear to pink or yellow edible gum produced when the tree bark is wounded. It is picked and eaten casually by people living in the dry north of Kenya, and extensively cultivated in Sudan for its gum.


Biophysical limits:
Flourishes in the altitude range of 100 to 1700 m above sea level; Mean annual temperatures -4 to 48 deg. C and mean annual rainfall of 300 to 1200 mm annually. Soil type varies from coarse-textured, deep sandy soils to dry, rocky soils, slightly acidic to moderately alkaline. It is intolerant to waterlogging and prefers well-aerated soils, especially rocky, loam or sandy soils. It is distributed in agroecological zones III - VII
Propagation and Tree Management
It can be propagated by direct sowing at site and grows slowly in arid lands. It occurs in woodlots and mixed farming systems. Weeding should be immediate in the season following planting and in the following two consecutive growing seasons. Young trees must be protected from livestock browsing on them. Lopping, coppicing, pruning and appropriate injuring for production of gum arabic are employed in tree management.
Seeds should be harvested before pods drying for easy collection and to avoid insect attacks. Seeds are then easily extracted by hand, then, they are should be immediately dusted with an insecticide.


Products:
  • Food; seeds are dried and conserved for human consumption as a vegetable. It also produces edible gum.
  • Fuel; produces excellent fuelwood and charcoal, sometimes it may be the only surviving species in the dry areas.
  • Timber; a source for poles, posts and toolhandles.
  • Medicine; the roots are used for medicine extraction for treating dysentery, gonorrhea and nodular leprosy.
  • Fodder; the pods and leaves are used as fodder for camel and goats.
  • Apiculture; it is a source of bee forage, soil conservation, sand stabilization, Commercial "gum arabic" and resin; it is commercially exploited for making food stabilizer, glue, pharmaceutical uses.


Services:
  • Erosion control; A. senegal can be used for desertification control, re-establishment of a vegetative cover in degraded areas, sand dune fixation and wind erosion control due to their tolerance for water scarcity.
  • Soil improver: Improves soil fertility by nutrient cycling after leaf fall.
  • Ornamental: It is grown as an ornamental tree in some parts.
  • Boundary or barrier or support: cut branches are useful for fencing in cattle rearing due to their spines.
  • Intercropping: It is a good species for agroforestry systems; it has been grown in combination with watermelon, millets and forage grasses.
Pests and Diseases
Seedlings are susceptible to the buffalo treehopper (Stictocephala bubalus) attacks. Spiders the Cyclops sp., can smother young growing apices. Coleoptera (bruchids), Lepidoptera, and Hymenoptera can damage the seeds during their larval stage of development. Locusts, Acridium melanorhodon cause widespread damage by defoliating them in an overnight. Other A. senegal enemies include; the fungi Cladosporium herbarium, Fusarium sp., Ravenelia acaciae-senegalae and R. acaciocola.
Information Source Links
  • Albrecht J. ed. 1993. Tree seed hand book of Kenya. GTZ Forestry Seed Center Muguga, Nairobi, Kenya.
  • Beentje HJ. 1994. Kenya trees, shrubs and lianas. National Museums of Kenya.
  • Bein E. 1996. Useful trees and shrubs in Eritrea. Regional Soil Conservation Unit (RSCU), Nairobi, Kenya.
Acacia senegal
Fungi
Occurring worldwide, most fungi are largely invisible to the naked eye, living for the most part in soil, dead matter, and as symbionts of plants, animals, or other fungi. They perform an essential role in all ecosystems in decomposing organic matter and are indispensable in nutrient cycling and exchange. Some fungi become noticeable when fruiting, either as mushrooms or molds.

Fungi are responsible for a range of serious plant diseases such as blight, grey mould, bunts, powdery mildew, and downy mildew. Crops of all kinds often suffer heavy losses.

Fungal plant diseases are usually managed with applications of chemical fungicides or heavy metals. In some cases, conventional breeding has provided fungus resistantcultivars.

Besides combatting yield losses, preventing fungal infection keeps crops free of toxic compounds produced by some pathogenic fungi. These compounds, often referred to as mycotoxins, can affect affect the immune system and disrupt hormone balances. Some mycotoxins are carcinogenic.
Resistance
Ability of a living organism not to get affected by a disease or pest; or of a pest not to be affected by a pesticide.

Pesticide Resistance is the ability of a life form to develop a tolerance to a pesticide. Pests (weeds, insects, mites, diseases, etc.) that become resistant to a pesticide will not be affected by the pesticide. When pests are resistant, it is more difficult to control the pest. Therefore, it is important to try to prevent pesticide resistance.