Arachis |
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peanut |
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Habit | Herbs, annual or perennial, sometimes woody basally, unarmed. | ||||
Stems | spreading, erect, prostrate, or creeping, sometimes subterranean, glabrous or pubescent. |
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Leaves | alternate, usually even-pinnate; stipules present, adnate to petiole base; petiolate; leaflets usually 4, rarely 3, stipels absent, blade margins entire, surfaces glabrous or pubescent. |
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Inflorescences | 1–7-flowered, axillary, spikes, sometimes subpaniculate; bracts present, similar to stipules; bracteoles paired at base of elongated hypanthium. |
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Flowers | papilionaceous; calyx, corolla, and stamens borne at summit of an elongated, tubular hypanthium, calyx lobes 5, bilabiate, linear, 4 adaxial lobes connate to form broad lip, sometimes 2 adaxialmost lobes fused to summit and adaxial lip appearing 3-toothed; corolla yellow to orange [brick-red or white]; stamens 10, monadelphous, with 8 functional anthers and 2 sterile filaments [9 or 10 functional and 0 or 1 sterile]; anthers alternately dorsifixed, oblong, and basifixed, globose, sometimes 1 or 2 stamens reduced to sterile filaments or absent; ovary sessile at anthesis, base later greatly elongated on peg; style filiform; stigma terminal. |
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Fruits | geocarpic, loments, sessile, torulose, not articulate, oblong or ovoid, ± indehiscent, glabrous. |
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Seeds | 1–6, ovoid or oblong; hilum subapical. |
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x | = 10. |
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Arachis |
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Distribution |
South America (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay) [Introduced in North America; introduced also in Mexico, West Indies, Central America, Asia, Africa, Australia] |
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Discussion | Species ca. 70 (2 in the flora). Arachis is most closely related to Chapmannia and Stylosanthes, based on morphological (V. E. Rudd 1981) and molecular evidence (M. Lavin et al. 2001, 2001b). It has been divided into nine sections, with many species displaying extensive morphological variation (A. Krapovickas and W. C. Gregory 2007). Two species are cultivated in the flora area for use as food or forage. Additional species are grown in tropical climates; they may be introduced into southern Florida in the future. Some cultivated strains are difficult to identify to species and are identified only to section. Geocarpic fruits are common to all species of Arachis. The flowers are chasmogamous and aerial, with a meristem at the base of the sessile ovary. After fertilization, the meristem elongates greatly to form a post-floral axis or the so-called peg that grows gravitropically until the developing fruit is below ground level (B. W. Smith 1950; A. Krapovickas and W. C. Gregory 2007). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 11. | ||||
Parent taxa | |||||
Subordinate taxa | |||||
Name authority | Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 2: 741. (1753): Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 329. (1754) | ||||
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