Leucaena collinsii

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Related Links
Small tree: Small fenceline L. collinsii subsp. collinsii tree, Chiapas, Mexico.
© Colin Hughes
Tree in maize field: L. collinsii subsp. zacapana (to 15 m tall) in maize field, Chiquimula, Guatemala. It is leafless during the dry season.
© Colin Hughes
Foliage and flowers
© Hughes C.E.

Local names:
Spanish (guash,guaje,chalip)

Leucaena collinsii is a small to medium sized deciduous tree, 10-15 (-20) m tall, and 20-40 cm diameter at breast height. Bark grey brown with shallow rusty orange brown vertical fissures, slash cream white. Trees frequently grow with a pronounced lean and branches are sometimes planar.

Leaves consist of (5) 6-16 pairs of pinnae, pinacular rachis 4-9 cm long, leaflets 4-7 mm long, 1-2 mm wide, 25-56 pairs of pinna, asymmetric about mid vein, broadly linear. The petiole gland is yellow green or green, sessile, round or elliptic, dome-shaped or rounded with a narrow central pore, 2 by 1 mm.

Flower heads 9-24 mm in diameter, 55-170 pale cream-white flowers, in groups of 2-3(6) in leaf axils on actively growing shoots, the leaves developing with the flower heads, the flowering shoot indeterminate in growth with pods borne on older wood within crown.

Pods 11-18(-20) cm long, (7-)10-19 mm wide, 1 or 2(-4) per flower head, linear-oblong, acuminate, or sometimes obtuse apically, sometimes with a short beak, flat, 9-20 seeded, mid-brown, glabrous, opening along both sutures.

Two subspecies are recognized, ssp. collinsii, which occurs in Mexico and ssp. zacapana, restricted to Guatemala. Tree form varies greatly, ssp. collinsii generally has a wide, open crown and heavy branching while ssp. zacapana is very branchy when young with numerous small branches and a spreading crown.

Ecology

L. collinsii is a species of the seasonally dry tropical inland valleys of southern Mexico and Guatemala. It occurs in valleys with marked rain shadow and seasonally dry or semi-arid tropical, frost-free climate with a long dry season lasting for 6-7 months. The species is drought tolerant, and notably ssp. zacapana, extends in to dry thorn scrub and semi-arid areas, often forming dense thickets in secondary vegetation.

Native range
Guatemala, Mexico

Tree management

The tree’s coppice resprouts are numerous and are lopped for fodder; ssp. zacapana shows very good coppicing ability and is managed as a bush fallow on a 4-year coppice rotation.

There are 22 000-23 000 seeds/kg in ssp. collinsii and 30 000-36 000 seeds/kg in ssp. zacapana. Seed can be stored under conditions of <10 % moisture content at <4 deg. C for long periods while retaining high viability. Seed should be stored in hermetically sealed containers.

L. collinsii is a species of the seasonally dry tropical inland valleys of southern Mexico and Guatemala. It occurs in valleys with marked rain shadow and seasonally dry or semi-arid tropical, frost-free climate with a long dry season lasting for 6-7 months. The species is drought tolerant, and notably ssp. zacapana, extends in to dry thorn scrub and semi-arid areas, often forming dense thickets in secondary vegetation.

The tree is a heavy seeder from an early age and poses risk of becoming a ruderal weed. Seed pretreatment is necessary before sowing, treatment depending on the age of the individual lot. Hot water treatment may be applied although the most reliable method is scarification.

  Trees of ssp. are cultivated for pod production. The unripe seeds are consumed locally and the pods marketed in regional markets in Guatemala and Mexico.

The leaves are readily consumed by stock and are highly digestible. Those of ssp. zacapana have highly nutritious leaves with low tannin content, high crude protein combined with low fibre.

The species is valued for high quality fuelwood.  spp. zacapana is particularly managed as a bush fallow on a 4-year rotation to produce high quality firewood.

Timber:  L. collinsii produces wood of high density and a high proportion of heartwood with mean wood density ranging between 0.75-0.91. It is very durable and therefore highly valued for poles and fence posts. Subspecies zacapana is extremely valued for its dense wood with abundant heartwood. Secondary stands are managed in parts of Guatemala on a four year coppice rotation specifically for fuelwood production.

Gum or resin:  The tree stem exudes a gum that is similar to gum arabic in properties.

Nitrogen fixing: The species is nitrogen fixing.

Trees of ssp. collinsii are planted at field boundaries and around houses as a living fence.

Soil improver: Lopped leaves and twigs are applied as green manure.

Intercropping: The tree is intercropped under taungya or whole rotation with fruit tree primarily as livestock feed and green manure. 

Other services:  L. collinsii is one of the most psyllid resistant leucaena species and it has been used in breeding programmes to improve resistance of other species.