Astragalus sect. Humistrati |
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Habit | Herbs perennial, mat-, clump-, or cushion-forming, stems prostrate, caulescent; caudex superficial or subterranean. |
Stems | several to many. |
Leaves | odd-pinnate, usually petiolate, sometimes subsessile to short-petiolate; leaflets (3 or)5–17(or 19). |
Racemes | compactly flowered, flowers ascending or spreading. |
Corollas | whitish, ochroleucous, greenish, pink-purple, or purple, banner recurved through 40–85°, keel apex obtuse or acuminate and beaked. |
Calyx | tubes campanulate, sometimes obconic-campanulate. |
Legumes | deciduous, sessile, ascending or spreading, sometimes, usually humistrate, ovoid, oblong, or oblong-ellipsoid, compressed dorsiventrally proximally or 3-sided, unilocular. |
Seeds | 4–26. |
Hairs | basifixed or malpighian. |
Stipules | connate or distally distinct. |
Astragalus sect. Humistrati |
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Distribution | w United States; sc United States; nw Mexico |
Discussion | Species 4 (4 in the flora). Section Humistrati consists of two subsections distributed in Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, eastern Oregon, southern Utah, southwestern Colorado, and trans-Pecos Texas. The subsections are: subsect. Humistrati (Astragalus humistratus, A. sesquiflorus); and subsect. Micromerii Barneby (A. chuskanus, A. micromerius). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 11. |
Parent taxa | |
Subordinate taxa | |
Synonyms | A. subg. m. |
Name authority | (M. E. Jones) Barneby: Mem. New York Bot. Gard. 13: 383. (1964) |
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