Anonychium (Benth.) Schweinf., Reliq. Kotschy.: 7. 1868.

Hughes, Colin E., Ringelberg, Jens J., Lewis, Gwilym P. & Catalano, Santiago A., 2022, Disintegration of the genus Prosopis L. (Leguminosae, Caesalpinioideae, mimosoid clade), PhytoKeys 205, pp. 147-189 : 147

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.205.75379

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FFEAC5AA-F99D-5078-BFD3-C78FD31A69BF

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scientific name

Anonychium (Benth.) Schweinf., Reliq. Kotschy.: 7. 1868.
status

 

Anonychium (Benth.) Schweinf., Reliq. Kotschy.: 7. 1868.

Prosopis section Anonychium , Benth. Hook. J. Bot. 4: 347. 1842.

Type.

Prosopis oblonga Benth. Benth., J. Bot. (Hooker) 4: 348. 1842, a synonym of Anonychium africanum .

Description.

Unarmed trees 4-20 m high, branches lacking axillary brachyblasts. Stipules inconspicuous, long-lanceolate, pubescent, caducous as young leaves develop, absent from most herbarium sheets. Leaves somewhat pendulous, 1-4 pairs of pinnae, the petiole 3-5 cm long, the rachis 5-9 cm long, the pinnular rachises 6-15 cm long, with 4-13 pairs of opposite leaflets, these 1.3-3.5 × 0.4-1.5 cm, glabrous or finely pubescent, mid-vein subcentric. Inflorescences spicate, 5-9 cm long, axillary, solitary or in pairs, densely flowered; pedicels 0.5 mm. Flowers small, yellowish or greenish-white, sweetly scented; calyx ca. 1 mm long; corolla ca. 3.5 mm long, the petals linear, free, glabrous on both sides; anthers apically broadened with an unusual anther gland borne ventrally between the thecae and forming a triangular hood-shaped protrusion made up of papillate cells; pollen with costae on the pores and a smooth (perforated) tectum; ovary and style pilose or villous. Fruits indehiscent, straight or sub-falcate, dark reddish-brown to blackish, shiny, subterete, 10-20 × 1.5-3.3 cm, exocarp hard, 1-2 mm thick, mesocarp spongy, thick, dry, endocarp segments thin, longitudinal, in one row (Figs 5B View Figure 5 and 7A View Figure 7 ). Seeds many, dark, shiny, ovate compressed, 8-10 × 4-9 mm, rattling within the pod when ripe.

Geographic distribution.

Monospecific. Widespread across Sahelian Africa, from Senegal in the west to Sudan and Ethiopia in the east (Fig. 8 View Figure 8 ).

Habitat and uses.

Anonychium africanum is native across the whole Sahelian savannah belt. Trees are maintained and managed by farming and pastoralist communities in traditional silvo-pastoral systems throughout the African Sahel, providing essential products, including wood, fuel, food, livestock fodder and medicines and enhancing soil fertility ( Weber et al. 2008). Seeds are widely dispersed by browsing animals, such as camels, cattle and goats at the end of the dry season ( Tybirk 1991) and perhaps also by humans who collect the pods to feed to their animals, and cow dung (containing viable seeds) to fertilise their fields.

Etymology.

Anonychium literally meaning the absence of nails or claws from the Latin or Greek ‘onych’ = ‘ónyx’ meaning nail or claw, refers to the lack of armature of this genus.

Affinities.

Prosopis africana has long been considered anomalous within the genus and was placed in its own section Anonychium by Bentham (1842) and later this was upranked to its own genus, Anonychium by Schweinfurth (1868; under the name A. lanceolatum Schweinf.). Unlike almost all other species of Prosopis s.l., P. africana lacks armature, has internally glabrous petals, pollen with costae ( Guinet 1969), V-shaped anthers with small stomia forming short pockets on the ventral surface of the anthers and anther glands that are apparently morphologically unique within mimosoids ( Luckow and Grimes 1997). The anther glands of Anonychium africanum (as P. africana , Luckow and Grimes 1997: Figs 25-27) stand out as quite different from the typical mimosoid claviform anther glands of the remaining species of Prosopis s.l., being sessile, borne ventrally between the thecae, rather than stipitate borne apically or dorsally from the connective between the thecae as in most other mimosoids and forming triangular hood-shaped protrusions made up of papillate cells which are also unique amongst mimosoid anther glands ( Luckow and Grimes 1997). Alongside the robust molecular evidence for placement of P. africana distantly related to the rest of Prosopis (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ), this suite of morphological differences amply justifies segregation of P. africana as a distinct monospecific genus.

Anonychium is a phylogenetically isolated lineage that subtends the grade of other unarmed, mainly species-poor genera, Plathymenia , Fillaeopsis and Newtonia which is paraphyletic with respect to the core mimosoid clade of Koenen et al. (2020) (Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ; Ringelberg et al. 2022). This is in line with pollen of Anonychium which shows similarities to Newtonia ( Guinet 1969).