Senegalia burkei, the black monkey thorn and botanically previously Acacia burkei, becomes a large tree of 30 m with a spreading or rounded crown (SA Tree List No. 161).
The bark on young branches is smooth and velvety. It develops to a yellowish, papery flaked rougher texture, also becoming dark brown and rough in patches. Pairs of downwardly curved dark prickles grow below the nodes.
The leaflets are quite variable in number and shape, often being ovate and asymmetric. They are bright green or blue-green in colour. The leaflets are sometimes velvety along the veins or all over, also on the rachis. Flowers grow in white spikes, followed by straight dark brown pods, constricted around the seeds.
The species distribution is in the north-east of South Africa, in all the provinces north of the Vaal River, and in several countries to the north in Africa.
The habitat is wooded grassland and bush. The habitat population is deemed of least concern early in the twenty first century (Coates Palgrave, 2002; iNaturalist; http://redlist.sanbi.org).