Vachellia pringlei is a species of flowering plant belonging to the mimosoid clade of the family Fabaceae.
Features distinguishing Vachellia pringlei from the many Acacia species and other species of Vachellia include these:
The GBIF map showing confirmed, georeferenced observations of Vachellia pringlei register the species' presence throughout Mexico from the Yucatan Peninsula to Baja California. Also there are reports from the southeastern USA.
In northeastern Mexico Vachellia pringlei inhabits Tamaulipan thorn scrub, of the Deserts and Xeric Shrublands ecoregion. In the northern Yucatan Peninsula it is described as occurring in mangrove areas, low-growing deciduous forest (often with cacti), low, sometimes flooded areas, and medium-height, semi-evergreen forests.
Traditionally, Vachellia pringlei has been used medicinally to treat skin problems and digestive and respiratory disorders. Also it is valued for attracting honey-producing bees, for firewood and construction, for use in veterinary medicine, plus, the gum which exudes from its trunk can be used as an adhesive.
Because of the extremely variable morphology of Vachellia pringlei, Britton and Rose (1928), Standley (1922) and others have divided this taxon into three or four species now understood to be regional variations not embodying differences significant enough to warrant status as a separate species.
For many years the taxon resided in the genus Acacia. However, in 2005, morphological and genetic studies showed that Acacia s.l. was polyphyetic, and that the then-recognized infrageneric relationships of Acacia species indicated that Acacia should be split into as many as five genera. Thus the genus Vachellia was resurrected, having been first published in 1834, and Vachellia pringlei made its way into it.
Source:
The genus Vachellia was named in honor of George Harvey Vachell, 1799-1839, who collected plants in China.
The species name "pringlei" is a pseudo-Latin name presumably honoring US botanist Cyrus Pringle, who between 1885 and 1909 made 39 plant-collecting expeditions to Mexico.