Caragana |
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pea-tree, peashrub |
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Habit | Shrubs or subshrubs [trees], armed or unarmed, stipules sometimes spine-tipped or spinescent, rachis spine-tipped. | ||||||||
Stems | erect or decumbent, glabrous or pubescent. |
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Leaves | alternate, sometimes clustered on spurs, even-pinnate, subpinnate, or appearing palmate [digitate]; stipules present, membranous when young, some with thickened midribs becoming bristle- or spinelike, or spinescent, 1.5–9 mm; rachis, when present, usually persistent; petiolate; leaflets 2–12[–20], opposite, blade margins entire, surfaces villous, glabrate, or glabrous. |
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Inflorescences | 1–4(or 5)-flowered, axillary, fasciculate or solitary, each peduncle-pedicel 1-flowered; bracts present, membranous, at base of peduncle, bracteoles present or absent, linear, minute, at base of peduncle and pedicel. |
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Flowers | papilionaceous; calyx persistent, tubular or campanulate, subgibbous, lobes 5, distinct, subequal, much shorter than tube, adaxial 2 usually smaller; corolla yellow or orange-yellow [rarely white or pink]; stamens 10, diadelphous; anthers uniform, dorsifixed; style straight or slightly curved. |
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Fruits | legumes, sessile, flattened, oblong or linear, dehiscent, non-septate, valves twisting in dehiscence, glabrous. |
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Seeds | [2 or]3–8, monochrome or mottled and streaked, oblong, ovoid, 4-angled, or globose [ellipsoid, subglobose, or reniform], smooth. |
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x | = 8. |
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Caragana |
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Distribution |
e Europe; w Asia; c Asia [Introduced in North America] |
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Discussion | Species 70–80 (3 in the flora). The number and persistence of spines on Caragana species is variable. The leaf rachises may persist after the leaflets fall, becoming woody and spinescent, and may last a few years. The stipules also may become spinescent and persist; plants under cultivation seem to produce relatively few or no spines, which may be relatively short or reduced to a bristle (W. J. Bean 1970–1988, vol. 1). Some species of Caragana are cold- and drought-resistant. They are cultivated extensively in Canada and the northern United States as ornamentals, for hedges, windbreaks, shelterbelts, and erosion control, and may persist. In addition to the three species treated here, some additional species of Caragana are cultivated in North America, including C. microphylla Lamarck, C. pygmaea de Candolle, C. sinica (Buc’hoz) Rehder, and C. spinosa de Candolle. Some of these are found only in arboreta or in specialty collections; others are more common. The three species treated here are the only taxa known to have become naturalized in the flora area. Caragana needs worldwide revision because species boundaries are uncertain in some taxa; names associated with some plants growing in cultivation are doubtful. (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 | Fabricius: Enum. ed. 2, 421. (1763) | ||||||||
Web links |