Archidendron F.Muell.

First published in Fragm. 5: 59 (1865)
This genus is accepted
The native range of this genus is Tropical & Subtropical Asia to Caroline Islands, E. Australia.

Descriptions

Timothy M. A. Utteridge and Laura V. S. Jennings (2022). Trees of New Guinea. Kew Publishing. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

Morphology General Habit
Trees and shrubs to 40 m tall, branches usually with prominent lenticels, sometimes myrmecophilous, spines absent. Stipules small, caducous
Morphology Leaves
Leaves bipinnate, glands present on rachis and pinnae, leaflets usually opposite and petiolulate, rarely unifoliolate. Inflorescences usually on old wood (cauliflorous), glomerules, fascicles, panicles or racemes, bracts and bracteoles present, caducous
Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers
Flowers usually bisexual, male flowers sometimes present, (3–)5-merous, uniform; calyx cupular to cylindrical; corolla partly tubular, fused to staminal tube at base; stamens numerous, fused into a tube at the base; carpels 1–15 per flower, sessile or stipitate, each with 1–16 ovules
Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits
Fruit chartaceous to coriaceous, fleshy or woody, straight, curved or twisted, valves twisted after dehiscence, outer surface often red, usually internally divided between seeds
Morphology Reproductive morphology Seeds
Seeds usually ellipsoid, flattened, testa black, brown or blue.
Ecology
In New Guinea Archidendron occurs in primary and secondary rain forest, coastal and beach forest, swamps, occasionally well-drained coral or sandy soils; a lowland genus usually from sea level to 800 m, but some taxa reaching 1600 m. A genus of >90 species, distributed from India to the Solomon Islands. New Guinea is the most speciose region in Malesia with at least 32 species (28 endemic).
Recognition
The genus usually has bipinnate leaves but several species only have 1 or 2 pairs of leaflets per pinna, the pinnae sometimes with a winged rachis (e.g. A. ptenopum Verdc.) and are sometimes very large being up to 1 m long (e.g. A. bellum Harms). Additional useful characters are the usually white or greenish corolla, the several ovaries per flower and the fruits often brightly coloured, red or orange, and often contorted into a U-shape, circle or several circles.
[TONG]

Legumes of the World. Edited by G. Lewis, B. Schrire, B. MacKinder & M. Lock. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. (2005)

Habit
Trees and shrubs
Ecology
Mostly of tropical lowland primary and secondary rain forest, on sandy or lateritic soils, a few species in swampy habitats
Distribution
Asia and Australia (India, Sri Lanka [1 endemic sp.], Indo-China [a centre of diversity in Thailand, Laos and Vietnam with 10 endemic spp.], throughout Malesia [4 spp. endemic in the Philippines, 5 in Borneo, 3 in Sulawesi, 3 in the Moluccas, and 30 in New Guinea and the Solomon Islands], 7 endemic in NE Australia, 1 sp. extending to Micronesia)
Note
Related to Cojoba and Zygia of the Americas

Nielsen (1981a) recognised 21 genera in Ingeae (Table 7), although 4 were not given generic names, but were referred to as ‘Gen. A’ to ‘Gen. D’. He recognised the genus Marmaroxylon, although without a generic number, so that the tribe, to the casual observer, appeared to contain only 20 genera. The genus Punjuba appended by Nielsen (1981a) under “genera and species of unknown affinity” is here treated as a synonym of Abarema, following Barneby & Grimes (1996), although we suggest that this may be reinstated as a good genus in the future. Nielsen (1981a) also included Pithecellobium incuriale (Vell.) Benth. as a “species of unknown affinity” but this is now placed in Leucochloron Barneby & Grimes (1996).

Polhill (1994) increased the number of genera of Ingeae to 25 (Table 7). He recognised Nielsen’s ‘Gen. A’ as Paraserianthes I.C.Nielsen, ‘Gen. B’ as Archidendropsis I.C.Nielsen, ‘Gen. C’ as Pararchidendron I.C.Nielsen, and ‘Gen. D’ as Macrosamanea Britton & Rose ex Britton & Killip. He placed Faidherbia in Ingeae for the first time, reinstated Cathormion, Samanea and Chloroleucon, and recognised the monospecific Obolinga Barneby (subsequently subsumed into Cojoba by Barneby & Grimes, 1997). Zapoteca, a segregate of Calliandra described by Hernández (1986), was also added by Polhill (1994). Klugiodendron, recognised by Nielsen (1981a), was considered a synonym of Abarema by Polhill (1994), and Affonsea was placed as a synonym of Inga, a position later confirmed by Pennington (1997).

The present treatment of Ingeae recognises 36 genera (24 of which are New World endemics) and (935)–951–(966) species (Fig. 27). We follow Barneby & Grimes (1997) in placing Obolinga as a synonym of Cojoba. Eight genera: Blanchetiodendron, Ebenopsis, Hesperalbizia, Hydrochorea, Leucochloron, Painteria, Pseudosamanea, and Sphinga, have either been reinstated or described as new since 1994 (Barneby & Grimes, 1996). Paraserianthes section Falcataria was raised to generic status as Falcataria (I.C.Nielsen) Barneby & Grimes (1996). Balizia Barneby & Grimes (1996) is considered a synonym of Albizia following Rico Arce (1999). Guinetia L.Rico & M.Sousa was described as new (Rico Arce et al., 1999, publ. 2000), and Viguieranthus Villiers in 2002.

Clarification of generic relationships within tribe Ingeae still suffers from a paucity of molecular data, partly due to a lack of appropriate material for DNA extraction of the recently described and reinstated genera. Luckow et al. (2000) included four ingoid genera in their analysis of the basal genera of Mimosoideae. These formed a group together with Faidherbia (then still considered a member of tribe Acacieae, although moved to Ingeae by Polhill (1994)). Barneby & Grimes (1996) concentrating on neotropical taxa, divided American ingoids into five informal alliances: the Abarema-, Samanea-, Chloroleucon-, Pithecellobium- and Inga- alliances. Genera of uncertain position within their system included Albizia, Enterolobium and Cedrelinga. Lysiloma was considered as intermediate between tribes Ingeae and Acacieae. Luckow et al. (2003) carried out a phylogenetic analysis of the Mimosoideae using chloroplast DNA sequence data. They treated sixteen of the 36 ingoid genera recognised in this account, including Faidherbia, but concluded that relationships within the Ingeae are generally unresolved and that, with only a few exceptions, clades within the ingoid part of their topology were not strongly supported. Albizia proved to be polyphyletic, supporting the findings of Grimes (1999).

Any new classification of the Ingeae will require sampling of all the genera not included by Luckow et al. (2003) and more extensive sampling of the larger and putatively non-monophyletic genera. Relationships between ingoid genera and the various elements of a polyphyletic Acacia have still to be resolved, although Luckow et al. (2003) have an Acacia subgenus Phyllodineae clade nested within the Ingeae, suggesting that at least part of Acacia sens. lat. (the Australian phyllodinous acacias) might be included within the Ingeae in the future, or that the Ingeae, as currently circumscribed, may have to be broken up into several distinct suprageneric taxa. Such suggestions are premature as 20 ingoid genera, including Abarema, Archidendron, Pithecellobium, Zygia and the largely Madagascan Viguieranthus have not yet been included in molecular analyses.

[LOWO]

Uses

Use
Used for timber (construction), fencing (stems), human food (fruit, e.g., A. jiringa (Jack) I.C.Nielsen, or jering, luknieng ) and flavouring (seeds), tanning, fish poisons, dyes, soaps and medicine
[LOWO]

Sources

  • Herbarium Catalogue Specimens

  • Interactive Key to Seed Plants of Malesia and Indo-China

    • The Malesian Key Group (2010) Interactive Key to Seed Plants of Malesia and Indo-China (Version 2.0, 28 Jul 2010) The Nationaal Herbarium Nederland Leiden and The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew
  • Kew Names and Taxonomic Backbone

    • The International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Vascular Plants 2024. Published on the Internet at http://www.ipni.org and https://powo.science.kew.org/
    • © Copyright 2023 International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Vascular Plants. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0
  • Legumes of the World Online

    • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
  • Trees of New Guinea

    • Trees of New Guinea
    • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
  • World Checklist of Vascular plants (WCVP)

    • The International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Vascular Plants 2024. Published on the Internet at http://www.ipni.org and https://powo.science.kew.org/
    • © Copyright 2023 World Checklist of Vascular Plants. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0