Astragalus lentiginosus var. trumbullensis |
Astragalus lentiginosus var. sesquimetralis |
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freckled milkvetch, Mount Trumbull milkvetch |
soda springs milkvetch, Sodaville milk vetch |
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Habit | Plants perennial, 30–45(–65) cm, herbage green or subglabrescent. | Plants perennial, to 70–80 cm. |
Stems | prostrate. |
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Leaves | 2–9.5(–10.5) cm; leaflets (7–)13–17, blades broadly obovate to oblanceolate or elliptic, 5–15 mm, apex retuse to round or subacute, adaxial surface usually strigose to strigulose, sometimes glabrate or glabrous. |
2–5 cm; leaflets 9–15(or 17), blades oblanceolate, 6–18 mm, terminal leaflet 7–15 mm, apex obtuse or subacute. |
Racemes | loosely 4–15(–17)-flowered; axis elongating, 3–9.5 cm in fruit. |
shortly and loosely 6–12-flowered, short and compact in fruit; axis 1–2 cm in fruit. |
Peduncles | 4.5–7.5 cm. |
1.5–4 cm. |
Flowers | 13–17 mm; calyx 6.3–7.4 mm, tube 4.8–5.5 mm, lobes 1.7–2 mm; corolla pink- or red-purple, sometimes with pale or white wing tips. |
14–14.5 mm; calyx 7–8 mm, tube 4.8–5.5 mm, lobes 2.2–2.5 mm; corolla purple. |
Legumes | evidently persistent, stramineous or mottled, linear-oblong to oblong or narrowly ellipsoid, not or scarcely inflated, 17–32 × 4–5.5(–7.5) mm, ± bilocular, somewhat fleshy becoming leathery or stiffly papery, strigulose; beak 3–5 mm, unilocular; stipe 0.1–1 mm. |
mottled, ovoid or broadly lanceoloid, moderately inflated, 16–26 × 9–12 mm, semibilocular, stiffly papery, strigulose; beak incurved, 4–8 mm, unilocular. |
Seeds | 14–28. |
12–20. |
Astragalus lentiginosus var. trumbullensis |
Astragalus lentiginosus var. sesquimetralis |
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Phenology | Flowering Apr (Sep). | Flowering May–Jun. |
Habitat | Sandstone outcrops and gravel, with Agave, Ephedra, Mortonia, Purshia, and other warm-desert shrubs. | Saline, seasonally moist clay flats, around seeps and springs. |
Elevation | 900–1800 m. (3000–5900 ft.) | 900–1400 m. (3000–4600 ft.) |
Distribution |
AZ |
CA; NV |
Discussion | Variety trumbullensis is restricted to Mohave County. It is closely related to vars. mokiacensis and palans, weakly differentiated by a series of features that intergrade insensibly but taken in combination are more or less diagnostic (as is true for most members of the lentiginosus complex). J. A. Alexander (2005) provided statistical evidence that this variety is indistinguishable from var. mokiacensis (as Astragalus mokiacensis), and he considered the two synonymous. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
The branches of var. sesquimetralis radiate, forming large, round plants that hug the ground. This habit, coupled with a long season of available water, is evidently conducive to long-continuing flowering and fruiting but is not necessarily an indication of a near relationship to other taxa that are similar (see discussion under 285c. var. multiracemosus). The variety is restricted to southern Mineral County, Nevada, and northern Inyo County, California. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 11. | FNA vol. 11. |
Parent taxa | ||
Sibling taxa | ||
Synonyms | Cystium sesquimetrale | |
Name authority | S. L. Welsh & N. D. Atwood: Rhodora 103: 81, fig. 3. (2001) | (Rydberg) Barneby: Leafl. W. Bot. 4: 116. (1945) |
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