Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Speciesbox Robinia pseudoacacia, commonly known in its native territory as black locust,<ref name=":0">Template:PLANTS</ref> is a medium-sized hardwood deciduous tree, belonging to the tribe Robinieae of the legume family Fabaceae. It is native to a few small areas of the United States, but it has been widely planted and naturalized elsewhere in temperate North America,<ref>Template:BONAP</ref> Europe, Southern Africa<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Asia and is considered an invasive species in some areas, such as the temperate east coast of Australia where the cultivar "Frisia" (Golden Robinia) was widely planted as a street tree before being classed as a weed.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Another common name is false acacia,<ref name=BSBI07>Template:BSBI 2007</ref> a literal translation of the specific name (pseudo [Greek ψευδο-] meaning fake or false and acacia referring to the genus of plants with the same name).
DescriptionEdit
The roots of black locust contain nodules that allow it to fix nitrogen, as is common within the pea family. Trees reach a typical height of Template:Convert with a diameter of Template:Convert.<ref name="eedd">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It is a very upright tree with a straight trunk and narrow crown that grows scraggly with age.<ref name="dirr" /> The bark is a reddish black and gray and tinged with red or orange in the grooves; it is deeply furrowed into grooves and ridges which run up and down the trunk and often cross and form diamond shapes.<ref name="dirr" /> The branches are typically zig-zaggy and may have ridges and grooves or may be round.<ref name="dirr" /> When young, the branches are at first coated with white silvery down; this soon disappears, and they become pale green and afterward reddish or greenish brown.
The dark blue-green leaves are lighter on the underside,Template:Citation needed and are compound, meaning that each leaf contains many smaller leaflike structures called leaflets, which are roughly paired on either side of the stem that runs through the leaf (rachis). There is typically one leaflet at the tip of the leaf (odd pinnate), and the leaves are alternately arranged on the stem. Each leaf is Template:Convert long and contains 9–19 leaflets, each being Template:Convert long, and Template:Convert wide. The leaflets are rounded or slightly indented at the tip and typically rounded at the base. The leaves come out of the bud folded in half, yellow green, covered with silvery down which soon disappears. Each leaflet initially has a minute stipel, which quickly falls, and is connected to the (rachis) by a short stem or petiolule. The leaves are attached to the branch with slender hairy petioles which are grooved and swollen at the base. The stipules are linear, downy, membranous at first and occasionally develop into prickles. The leaves appear relatively late in spring, and turn a clear pale yellow in autumn. The leaflets fold together in wet weather and at night (nyctinasty), as some change of position at night is a habit of the entire leguminous family.
Young trees are often spiny, especially on root suckers and branches near the ground; mature trees often lack spines. R. pseudoacacia is quite variable in the number of spines present, as some trees are densely prickly and other trees have no prickles at all. The spines typically remain on the tree until the young thin bark to which they are attached is replaced by the thicker mature bark. They develop from stipules<ref name="foc">Template:EFloras</ref> (small leaf-like structures that grow at the base of leaves), and since stipules are paired at the base of leaves, the spines will be paired at the bases of leaves. They range from Template:Convert in length and are somewhat triangular with a flared base and sharp point. Their color is of a dark purple and they adhere only to the bark.<ref name="foc" />
The winter buds are minute, naked (having no scales covering them), three or four together, protected in a depression by a scale-like covering lined on the inner surface with a thick coat of tomentum and opening in early spring. When the buds are forming they are covered by the swollen base of the petiole.Template:Citation needed The large flowers open in May or June for 7–10 days, after the leaves have developed. They are arranged in loose drooping clumps (racemes) which are typically Template:Convert long.<ref name="dirr" /> The flowers themselves are cream-white (rarely pink or purple) with a pale yellow blotch in the center and imperfectly papilionaceous in shape. They are about Template:Convert wide, very fragrant, and produce large amounts of nectar. Each flower is perfect, having both stamens and a pistil (male and female parts). There are 10 stamens enclosed within the petals; these are fused together in a diadelphous configuration, where the filaments of 9 are all joined to form a tube and one stamen is separate and above the joined stamens. The single ovary is superior and contains several ovules. Below each flower is a calyx which looks like leafy tube between the flower and the stem. It is made from fused sepals and is dark green and may be blotched with red. The pedicels (stems which connect the flower to the branch) are slender, Template:Convert, dark red or reddish green.
The fruit is a typical legume fruit, being a flat and smooth pea-like pod Template:Convert long and Template:Convert broad. The fruit usually contains 4–8 seeds.<ref name="dirr" /> The seeds are dark orange brown with irregular markings. They ripen late in autumn and hang on the branches until early spring.<ref name="Keeler">Template:Cite book</ref> There are typically 25,500 seeds per pound.<ref name="usda factsheet">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Cotyledons are oval in shape and fleshy.
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Reproduction and dispersalEdit
Black locust reproduces both sexually via flowers, and asexually via root suckers. The flowers are pollinated by insects, primarily by Hymenopteran insects. The physical construction of the flower separates the male and female parts so that self-pollination will not typically occur.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The seedlings grow rapidly but they have a thick seed coat which means that not all seeds will germinate. The seed coat can be weakened via hot water, sulfuric acid, or be mechanically scarified, which will allow a greater quantity of the seeds to grow.<ref name="dirr" /><ref name="usda factsheet" /> The seeds are produced in good crops every year or every other year.Template:Citation needed
Root suckers are an important method of local reproduction of this tree. The roots may grow suckers after damage (by being hit with a lawn mower or otherwise damaged) or after no damage at all. The suckers are stems which grow from the roots, directly into the air and may grow into full trees. The main trunk also has the capability to grow sprouts and will do so after being cut down.<ref name="eedd" /> This makes removal of black locust difficult as the suckers need to be continually removed from both the trunk and roots or the tree will regrow. This is considered an asexual form of reproduction.
The suckers allow black locust to grow into colonies which often exclude other species. These colonies may form dense thickets which shade out competition.<ref name="mdnr">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Black locust has been found to have either 2n=20 or 2n=22 chromosomes.
Flavonoid contentEdit
Black locust leaves contain flavone glycosides characterised by spectroscopic and chemical methods as the 7-O-β-ᴅ-glucuronopyranosyl-(1→2)[α-ʟ-rhamnopyranosyl-(1→6)]-β-ᴅ-glucopyranosides of acacetin (5,7-dihydroxy-4′-methoxyflavone), apigenin (5,7,4′-trihydroxyflavone), diosmetin (5,7,3′-trihydroxy-4′-methoxyflavone) and luteolin (5,7,3′,4′-tetrahydroxyflavone).<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Similar speciesEdit
Although similar in general appearance to the honey locust, the black locust lacks that tree's characteristic long branched thorns on the trunk, having instead pairs of short prickles at the base of each leaf; the leaflets are also much broader than honey locust. It may resemble Styphnolobium japonicum, which has smaller flower spikes and lacks spines.
TaxonomyEdit
The black locust is a plant from the subfamily of Faboideae in the family of legumes (Fabaceae) and is a relative of the pea and bean.Template:Citation needed
The black locust is commonly referred to as "false acacia" after its species name "pseudoacacia", although it is not particularly closely related to the acacia, which belongs to the mimosa subfamily (Mimosoideae). Both species are similar in the form of their feathered leaves and thorns, but the flower shapes are very different. Confusion between species of both genera is almost impossible in higher latitudes, since acacias are native to subtropical and tropical areas and do not thrive in the cooler climates favoured by the black locust.Template:Citation needed
History and namingEdit
The tree was identified in 1607 at Jamestown by British colonists, who used the timber to build houses. The tree was named for its resemblance to Ceratonia siliqua, known as the "Old World Locust".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Jesuit missionaries apparentlyTemplate:Weasel inline fancied that this was the tree that supported St. John in the wilderness, despite its being native to North America.Template:Citation needed
It was introduced into Britain in 1636.<ref name="dirr">Template:Cite book</ref>
Robinia is a native North American genus, but traces of it are found in the Eocene and Miocene rocks of Europe.<ref name="Keeler" />
The genus is named after the royal French gardeners Jean Robin and his son Template:Ill, who brought the plant to Europe in 1601, in what may be regarded as a reintroduction.Template:Clarification neededTemplate:Citation needed A black locust planted by Jean Robin in 1601 still grows in the Square René Viviani in Paris, and is believed to be the oldest living tree in that city. Another was planted in 1636 by Vespasien Robin at the Jardin des plantes and can still be viewed today.
DistributionEdit
The black locust is native to the eastern United States, but the exact native range is not accurately known<ref name="sylv">Template:Silvics</ref> as the tree has been cultivated and is currently found across the continent, in all the lower 48 states, eastern Canada, and British Columbia.<ref name=":0" /> The native range is thought to be two separate populations, one centered about the Appalachian Mountains, from Pennsylvania to northern Georgia, and a second westward focused around the Ozark Plateau and Ouachita Mountains of Arkansas, Oklahoma and Missouri.Template:Citation needed
Black locust's current range has been expanded by humans distributing the tree for landscaping and now includes Pakistan, India, Australia, Canada, China, Europe, Northern and South Africa, temperate regions in Asia, New Zealand, Southern South America.<ref name=":1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
EcologyEdit
Black locust is a shade-intolerant species<ref name="sylv" /> and therefore is typical of young woodlands and disturbed areas where sunlight is plentiful and the soil is dry. In this sense, black locust can be considered a weed tree. It also spreads by underground shoots or suckers, which contributes to the weedy character of this species.<ref name="dirr" />
When growing in sandy areas this plant can enrich the soil by means of its nitrogen-fixing nodules, allowing other species to move in.<ref name="eedd" /> On sandy soils black locust may replace other vegetation which cannot fix nitrogen.<ref name="usda factsheet" />
Black locust is a typical early successional plant, a pioneer species. It grows best in bright sunlight and does not handle shade well.<ref name="sylv" /> It specializes in colonizing disturbed areas and edges of woodlots before it is eventually replaced with taller or more shade-tolerant species. It prefers dry to moist limestone soils but will grow on most soils as long as they are not wet or poorly drained.<ref name="sylv" /> This tree tolerates a soil pH range of 4.6 to 8.2.<ref name="usda factsheet" /> Within its native range it will grow on soils of Inceptisols, Ultisols, and Alfisols groups, but does not do well on compacted, clayey or eroded soils. Black locust is a part of the Appalachian mixed mesophytic forests.
Black locust is host to up to 67 species of lepidoptera,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and provides valuable cover when planted on previously open areas. Its seeds are eaten by bobwhite quail and other game birds and squirrels. Woodpeckers may nest in the trunk since older trees are often infected by heart rot. The deeply grooved bark also makes it a preferred species for some bat roosts.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
PestsEdit
Locust leaf miner Odontota dorsalis attacks the tree in spring and turns the leaves brown by mid summer, slowing the growth of the tree though not seriously.<ref name="usda factsheet" /> Locust borer Megacyllene robiniae larvae carve tunnels into the trunk of the tree and make it more prone to being knocked down by the wind. Heart rot is the only significant disease affecting black locust.<ref name="usda factsheet" /> Black locust is also attacked by Chlorogenus robiniae, a virus which causes witch's broom growths; clear leaflet veins are a symptom of the disease.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The black locust is among the preferred reproductive hosts of the polyphagous shot-hole borer (PSHB, Euwallacea fornicatus). The PSHB will tunnel galleries into the trees, where it cultivates a fusarium fungus as a food source. The tree's vascular systems are disrupted; causing dieback.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
InvasivenessEdit
Black locust is considered invasive on its native continent, specifically in the western United States, New England region, northern California, and in the Midwest. In the prairie and savanna regions of the Midwest, black locust can dominate and shade open habitats.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> These ecosystems have been decreasing in size, and black locust is contributing to this reduction; when black locust invades an area, it will convert the grassland ecosystem into a forested ecosystem where the grasses are displaced.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Black locust has been listed as invasive in Connecticut, Wisconsin, and Michigan, and is prohibited in Massachusetts.<ref name=":0" />
In Australia, black locust has become naturalized within Victoria, New South Wales, South Australia and Western Australia. It is considered an environmental weed there.<ref name=":1" /> In South Africa, it is regarded as a weed because of its suckering habit.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Black locust outcompetes nearby trees with its extreme growth rate, remaining herbaceous longer than most woody species. In Kashmir, India, the average height growth rate of black locust was Template:Convert per year.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> At sites in Latium, Italy, the height growth rate of Template:Convert tall black locust over 8 months averaged Template:Convert on cultivated land and Template:Convert on degraded cultivated land.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
ToxicityEdit
The bark, leaves, and wood are toxic to both humans and livestock.<ref name="ww">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Important constituents of the plant are the toxalbumin robin, which loses its toxicity when heated, and robinin, a nontoxic glucoside.<ref>Medicinal and Poisonous Plants of Southern and Eastern Africa – Watt and Brandwijk</ref>
Horses that consume the plant show signs of anorexia, depression, incontinence, colic, weakness, and cardiac arrhythmia. Symptoms usually occur about 1 hour following consumption, and immediate veterinary attention is required.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
The sawdust and shavings from Robinia lumber can cause contact dermatitis in sensitive persons.<ref>Template:Cite report</ref>
Cultivation and usesEdit
Black locust can be easily propagated from roots, softwood, or hardwood.<ref name="dirr" /><ref name="usda factsheet" /> Cultivars may be grafted, ensuring that parent and daughter plants will be genetically identical.
In Europe, it is often planted along streets and in parks, especially in large cities, because it tolerates pollution well.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
CultivarsEdit
Several cultivars exist, 'Frisia' being one of the most planted ones.
- 'Decaisneana' has been considered a cultivar but is more accurately a hybrid (R. pseudoacacia x R. viscosa). It has light rose-pink colored flowers and small or no prickles.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- ‘Frisia’, a selection with bright yellow-green leaves and red prickles, is occasionally planted as an ornamental tree.<ref name="dirr" />
- 'Purple robe' has dark rose-pink flowers and bronze red new growth. The flowers tend to last longer than on the wild tree.<ref name="dirr" />
- 'Tortuosa', a small tree with curved and distorted branches.<ref name="dirr" /><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- 'Unifoliola', a plant with fewer leaflets, no prickles, and a shorter height.
Black locust has been spread and used as a plant for erosion control as it is fast growing and generally a tough tree.<ref name="usda factsheet" /> The wood, considered the most durable wood in North America, has been very desirable and motivated people to move the tree to areas where it is not native so the wood can be farmed and used.
Food and medicineEdit
HoneyEdit
Black locust is a major honey plant in the eastern US, and has been planted in European countries. In many European countries, it is the source of the renowned acacia honey. Flowering starts after 140 growing degree days. However, its blooming period is short (about 10 days) and it does not consistently produce a honey crop year after year. Weather conditions can have quite an effect on the amount of nectar collected, as well; in Ohio for example, good locust honey flow happens in one of five years.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Other produceEdit
In traditional medicine of India, different parts of R. pseudoacacia are used as laxative, antispasmodic, and diuretic.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
In Liguria, Italy<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Romania<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the flowers are sometimes used to produce a sweet and perfumed jam. This means manual harvesting of flowers, eliminating the seeds and boiling the petals with sugar, in certain proportions, to obtain a light sweet and delicate perfume jam.
Although the bark and leaves are toxic, various reports suggest that the seeds and the young pods of the black locust are edible. Shelled seeds are safe to harvest from summer through fall, and are edible both raw and boiled.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Due to the small size of the seeds, shelling them efficiently can prove tedious and difficult. In France, Italy and Romania, R. pseudoacacia flowers are eaten as beignets after being coated in batter and fried in oil;<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> they are also eaten in Japan, largely as tempura.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Erosion controlEdit
R. pseudoacacia is considered an excellent plant for growing in disturbed areas as an erosion control plant.<ref name="usda factsheet" /> Black locust's shallow, aggressive roots help hold onto the soil, and nitrogen-fixing bacteria on its root system allow it to grow on poor soils, making it an early colonizer of disturbed areas. Obviating the mass application of fertilizers, black locust and other nitrogen-fixing tree and shrub species have gained importance in managed forestry.<ref name="fao bl" />
FirewoodEdit
Black locust is planted for firewood, as it grows rapidly, is highly resilient in a variety of soils, and it grows back rapidly after harvest from the existing root system (i.e. coppicing).<ref name="OSU managing your woodlot">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Black locust is highly valued as firewood for wood-burning stoves; it burns slowly, with little visible flame or smoke, and has a higher heat content than any other species that grows widely in the eastern United States, comparable to the heat content of anthracite.<ref name="firewood">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> For best results, it should be seasoned like any other hardwood, but black locust is also popular because of its ability to burn even when wet.<ref name="fao bl">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In fireplaces, it can be less satisfactory because knots and beetle damage make the wood prone to "spitting" coals for distances of up to several feet.Template:Citation needed If the black locust is cut, split, and cured while relatively young (within 10 years), thus minimizing beetle damage, "spitting" problems are minimal.Template:Citation needed
ConstructionEdit
This native hardwood is also prized by North American shipwrights for making rot-resistant trunnels in traditional wooden ship construction.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Template:Multiple image
The wood is extremely hard, being one of the hardest woods in Northern America with a Janka hardness test of 1,700 lbf (7,560 N)<ref>The Wood Database “Black Locust (Robinia pseudoacacia)”</ref> and specific gravity of 0.733 (733 kilograms per cubic metre or 45.7 pounds per cubic foot). It is very resistant to rot, and durable, making it prized for furniture, flooring, paneling, fence posts, and small watercraft. Black Locust is a highly durable organic wood product that does not require chemical treatment to preserve its beauty for 50 years or longer.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Wet, newly cut planks have an offensive odor which disappears with seasoning. Black locust is still in use in some rustic handrail systems. In the Netherlands and some other parts of Europe, black locust is one of the most rot-resistant local trees, and projects have started to limit the use of tropical wood by promoting this tree and creating plantations. Flavonoids in the heartwood allow the wood to last over 100 years in soil.<ref name="=bl">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
With a light yellowish color and strength, the wood was much used for decorative inlays and banding in furniture in England and France in the 17th and 18th centuries, under the name "acacia" or "Virginia acacia".<ref>Edwards, Ralph, The Shorter Dictionary of English Furniture: From the Middle Ages to the Late Georgian Period, "Acacia", p. 21, 1987, Spring Books (reprint of 1964, Country Life Books)</ref> Recently, Robinia has become popular for outdoor furniture and playground equipment.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In 1900, the value of Robinia pseudoacacia was reported to be practically destroyed in nearly all parts of the U.S. beyond the mountain forests which are its home by locust borers which riddle the trunk and branches. Were it not for these insects, it would be one of the most valuable timber trees that could be planted in the northern and middle states. Young trees grow quickly and vigorously for a number of years, but soon become stunted and diseased, and rarely live long enough to attain any commercial value.<ref name=Keeler />
In cultureEdit
In Asia, many black locusts, called cihuai (zh:刺槐), yanghuai (foreign huai zh:洋槐, against native huai zh:国槐) or simply "acacias", were planted in Dalian, Liaoning, China, during its Russian and Japanese occupation, and are loved by the local people: there is Acacia Avenue (槐树大道) in downtown; the Acacia Flower Festival (槐花節) is celebrated every year in May;<ref>Dalian Events and Festivals (Dalian, Liaoning, China) - World Guides</ref> and acacia honey is collected in the suburbs by bee keepers.
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- Purdue University
- Robinia pseudoacacia images at Forestry Images
- Robinia pseudoacacia – US Forest Service Fire Effects Database
- Robinia pseudoacacia - information, genetic conservation units and related resources. European Forest Genetic Resources Programme (EUFORGEN)
- " Coach " Tutoring Center 2018, Robinia pseudoacacia