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sensitive pea

Florida keys sensitive pea

Habit Herbs, annual or perennial, shrubs, or trees, unarmed; roots with bacterial nodules, rarely from woody rootstock. Herbs, perennial, to 0.9 m; roots horizontal, rhizomelike.
Stems

erect, procumbent, or prostrate, branches usually straight, sometimes zigzag, glabrous or pubescent.

erect, not or weakly branched.

Leaves

alternate, even-pinnate;

stipules present;

petiolate;

extrafloral nectaries or glandular hairs present or absent, extrafloral nectaries on petiole, sessile, subsessile, or stipitate, usually cup-shaped;

leaflets 1–28(–32)[–40] pairs, blade margins usually entire, surfaces glabrous or pubescent.

3–8.5 cm;

petiole 3–7 mm;

extrafloral nectary 1, subsessile or shortly stipitate;

leaflets 8–18(–20) pairs, blades lanceolate- or linear-oblong, 9–20 × 2–3.3 mm.

Racemes

1–4-flowered, supra-axillary.

Inflorescences

1–10(–20)-flowered, axillary, racemes, erect;

bracts present, inconspicuous;

bracteoles 2, caducous or persistent at anthesis.

Pedicels

(6–)8–22(–26) mm;

bracteoles distal to mid pedicel.

Flowers

caesalpinioid, asymmetric, enantiostylous;

calyx bilateral, lobes 5, persistent;

corolla yellow, petals unequal, blades narrowed to claw, claw sometimes red-spotted or orange reddish;

stamens (2 or)3–10, equal or irregularly unequal;

filaments glabrous, usually nearly equal to anthers;

anthers basifixed, dehiscing by apical pores or short slits, lateral sutures ciliolate;

ovary shortly stipitate, incurved, linear, often hairy, sometimes glabrous;

style usually terminating in minute, stigmatic cavity.

calyx greenish, sepal venation reticulate;

corolla rich yellow, petals all or some reddish spotted at claw, to (6–)8–22(–26) mm;

stamens 10;

anthers all or some yellow, dull reddish, or both, to 8–10.5 mm;

ovary often hairy, sometimes glabrous.

Fruits

legumes, stipitate, flat, straight or curved, linear or linear-oblong, elastically dehiscent, coiling at dehiscence, glabrous or pubescent, often corrugated over seeds.

Legumes

straight or slightly curved, linear, 35–75(–85) × 4.5–6 mm.

Seeds

1–25+, obovoid-ellipsoid to rhomboid or trapezoid.

(2.8–)3.2–4.8 mm.

x

= 7, 8.

Chamaecrista

Chamaecrista deeringiana

Phenology Flowering spring–mid summer.
Habitat Pine and pine-oak forests.
Elevation 0–200 m. [0–700 ft.]
Distribution
from USDA
North America; Mexico; Central America; South America; West Indies; Asia; Indian Ocean Islands (Madagascar, Seychelles); Australia
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
AL; FL; GA; MS
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Species ca. 330 (12 in the flora).

Chamaecrista was segregated from the large genus Cassia and placed in subtribe Cassiinae, together with Cassia in the strict sense and Senna (H. S. Irwin and R. C. Barneby 1981, 1982). In recent molecular phylogenetic studies Cassia and Senna appear as sister taxa (B. Marazzi et al. 2006; A. Bruneau et al. 2008; Marazzi and M. J. Sanderson 2010), whereas Chamaecrista appears more distantly related and sister of the monospecific Batesia Spruce ex Bentham (Bruneau et al.). Among traditional caesalpinioids, Chamaecrista seems to be the only genus possessing rhizobial root nodules (H. D. L. Corby 1988; J. I. Sprent 2001). Flowers of Chamaecrista are asymmetric and specialized in relation to buzz pollination (pollen-collecting bees vibrate the flowers to release pollen from the anthers; G. Gottsberger and I. Silberbauer-Gottsberger 1988).

Of the six sections recognized in the current classification of Chamaecrista (H. S. Irwin and R. C. Barneby 1982), only sects. Apoucouita (H. S. Irwin & Barneby) H. S. Irwin & Barneby and Xerocalyx (Bentham) H. S. Irwin & Barneby appear as monophyletic, whereas the monospecific sect. Grimaldia (Schrank) H. S. Irwin & Barneby is embedded within sect. Absus (de Candolle ex Colladon) H. S. Irwin & Barneby, and sects. Caliciopsis H. S. Irwin & Barneby and Xerocalyx are nested within sect. Chamaecrista (A. Conceição et al. 2009). These molecular phylogenetic analyses suggest that a shift from a relatively species-poor group of rainforest trees to a more diverse and species-rich clade of savannah shrubs occurred early in the diversification history of Chamaecrista. The latter clade is composed of two ecologically and morphologically distinct main subclades (Conceição et al.). Almost 81% of Chamaecrista species occur in the Americas (G. P. Lewis et al. 2005).

In North America, Chamaecrista is represented by species of sects. Caliciopsis, Chamaecrista, and Grimaldia. All but C. greggii, a microphyllous shrub or small tree, are annual or perennial herbaceous plants. The United States represents the northern limit of the geographic distribution of Chamaecrista in the Americas.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

The horizontal root system of Chamaecrista deeringiana, the only feature distinguishing this species from sympatric specimens of C. fasciculata, is interpreted as an adaptation to its fire-prone habitat.

Chamaecrista deeringiana is locally abundant in central and southern peninsular Florida, and in western Florida northward into Baldwin County, Alabama; it has also been documented from Peach and Taylor counties, Georgia, and Harrison County, Mississippi.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Key
1. Leaflets 1 or 2 pairs.
→ 2
2. Leaflets 2 pairs; racemes terminal.
C. absus
2. Leaflets 1 pair; racemes axillary.
C. rotundifolia
1. Leaflets 2–28(–32)[–40] pairs.
→ 3
3. Shrubs or trees, xerophytic, microphyllous; leaflets (2 or)3–5(or 6) pairs.
C. greggii
3. Herbs, mesophytic, not microphyllous; leaflets 2–28(–32)[–40] pairs.
→ 4
4. Leaflets 2–9 or (4 or)5–12 pairs.
→ 5
5. Stems usually erect, rarely procumbent, regularly branched.
C. serpens
5. Stems procumbent or prostrate, long and weakly or not branched.
→ 6
6. Sepal venation parallel; leaflets (4 or)5–12 pairs; petals 5–14 mm; Texas.
C. calycioides
6. Sepal venation reticulate; leaflets 2–5 or (5 or)6–9 pairs; petals 3.5–6.5(–7) or 11–15 mm; peninsular Florida and Florida Keys.
→ 7
7. Leaflets (5 or)6–9 pairs; petals to 11–15 mm; Florida Keys.
C. lineata
7. Leaflets 2–5 pairs; petals 3.5–6.5(–7) mm; peninsular Florida.
C. pilosa
4. Leaflets (6–)8–28(–32)[–40] pairs.
→ 8
8. Stems procumbent or prostate or mat-forming, branches straight or in zigzag pattern; on sandy plains and sand dunes of coastal Texas.
→ 9
9. Pedicels 5–15 mm; stipules pale green becoming brownish or yellowish, 3+ times as long as wide; stems rarely from woody rootstock, branches usually straight.
C. chamaecristoides
9. Pedicels 20–42 mm; stipules green, to 2 times as long as wide; stems often from horizontal, woody rootstock, branches often in zigzag pattern.
C. flexuosa
8. Stems erect, branches usually straight; wide range of habitats.
→ 10
10. Racemes usually 1(or 2)-flowered; pedicels 0.5–4[–16] mm; petals to.
→ 3
3. 5–8(–9)[–16] mm.
C. nictitans
10. Racemes 1–4(or 6)-flowered; pedicels (6–)8–22(–26) mm; petals to (6–)8–23(–26) mm.
→ 11
11. Roots horizontal and rhizomelike.
C. deeringiana
11. Roots not rhizomelike.
C. fasciculata
Source FNA vol. 11. Treatment author: Brigitte Marazzi. FNA vol. 11. Treatment author: Brigitte Marazzi.
Parent taxa Fabaceae > subfam. Caesalpinioideae (excluding Mimosoid clade) Fabaceae > subfam. Caesalpinioideae (excluding Mimosoid clade) > Chamaecrista
Sibling taxa
C. absus, C. calycioides, C. chamaecristoides, C. fasciculata, C. flexuosa, C. greggii, C. lineata, C. nictitans, C. pilosa, C. rotundifolia, C. serpens
Subordinate taxa
C. absus, C. calycioides, C. chamaecristoides, C. deeringiana, C. fasciculata, C. flexuosa, C. greggii, C. lineata, C. nictitans, C. pilosa, C. rotundifolia, C. serpens
Synonyms Cassia, Cassia subg. absus Cassia deeringiana
Name authority (Linnaeus) Moench: Methodus, 272. (1794) Small & Pennell: Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 44: 345. (1917)
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