Dialium guineense

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Related Links
Dialium guineense slash
© Joris de Wolf, Patrick Van Damme, Diego Van Meersschaut
Dialium guineense foliage.
© Joris de Wolf, Patrick Van Damme, Diego Van Meersschaut
Dialium guineense flowers.
© Joris de Wolf, Patrick Van Damme, Diego Van Meersschaut
Dialium guineense leaves.
© Joris de Wolf, Patrick Van Damme, Diego Van Meersschaut

Local names:
English (tumble tree,black velvet,Sierra Leone tamarind,velvet tamarind), French (tamarinier noir,dialium de Guinée,afambeau), Fula (meko,kedebe,mako,mekohi), Igbo (icheku), Mandinka (kosito), Wolof (solam,solom), Yoruba (awin)

Dialium guineense is a tree to 30 m high, with a densely leafy crown, but often shrubby. Bole without buttresses, Bark smooth, grey; slash reddish, yielding a little red gum.

Leaves sometimes finely hairy, with a common stalk 5-13 cm long, with an odd terminal leaflet and usually 2 pairs of opposite or alternate leaflets, the lower pair being somewhat smaller; leaflets mostly 3.5-10 x 2.5-5 cm, elliptic to broadly elliptic, sometimes slightly obovate; blunt at the apex or abruptly and shortly acuminate, symmetrical and rounded or slightly cuneate at the base; leathery, glabrous above and with the midrib slightly sunken, sometimes finely hairy beneath.

Flowers usually whitish, in large terminal, or occasionally axillary, panicles up to 30 cm long; branches spreading out widely and more or less horizontally; the whole infloresence at first covered with very short, brownish hairs; individual flowers with short stout stalks, the buds about 2 mm long.

Fruits usually abundant, more or less circular and flattened, but sometimes almost globose, up to 2.5 cm in diameter, densely velvety, black; each fruit with a stalk about 6 mm long with a little collar near the apex, with a brittle shell enclosing 1 seed (or exceptionally 2), embedded in a dry, brownish, sweetly acidic, edible pulp.

The origin of the generic name is not known; J. E. Smith, a noted 18th century English botanist, sought it and could not discover it, nor have modern botanists. 

The specific name means ‘of Guinea’.

Ecology

D. guineense grows in dense savannah forests, shadowy canyons and gallery forests. It is found from Senegal to Sudan along the southern border of the Sahel. This is the most common and widespread Dialium in Nigeria. In Ghana, D. guineense is found along transition zones bordering high forest, in riverian forest of the savannah woodland, in coastal scrub, and in riparian vegetation of the Volta near Ada.

Native range
Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Cote d'Ivoire, Equatorial Guinea, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Sao Tome et Principe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Sudan, Togo

Tree management

Harvesting the trees is difficult because the wood is dense. They often have tall buttresses, which have to be slashed before cutting, as much of the wood would be wasted if the trunk were cut above the buttress. The logs cannot be transported by river as they sink in water.

Seed storage behaviour is orthodox.

D. guineense grows in dense savannah forests, shadowy canyons and gallery forests. It is found from Senegal to Sudan along the southern border of the Sahel. This is the most common and widespread Dialium in Nigeria. In Ghana, D. guineense is found along transition zones bordering high forest, in riverian forest of the savannah woodland, in coastal scrub, and in riparian vegetation of the Volta near Ada.

Mechanical scarification is the best treatment to promote germination. The seeds can be sown in beds containing a mixture of equal parts of forest topsoil and river sand. They are buried just below the soil surface and a layer of sawdust is spread on top. The beds should be shaded and watered regularly (twice a day). During germination, the testa breaks at soil level, exposing the creamy white, thick cotyledons. Seedlings with epigeal germination.

  The pulp is red, with a sweet-sour, astringent flavour similar to baobab, but sweeter. It is peeled and eaten raw; it can be a little constipating. The thirst-quenching, refreshing fruit pulp can also be soaked in water and drunk as a beverage. Leaves are bitter; they may be used to cook ‘domoda’, a Ghanaian dish that tastes both sweet and bitter.

The tree is said to make good firewood and charcoal.

Timber:  Sapwood is white with distinct ripple marks; the heartwood is red-brown. Because of the high silicate content of the timber, axes and saws quickly get blunt. The wood is hard, durable, heavy, light brown, with a fine texture. It is used for vehicles, houses and flooring.

Medicine:  Bark and leaves are used against several diseases.