Eysenhardtia |
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kidneywood |
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Habit | Shrubs or trees, unarmed, mostly glandular-punctate throughout newer growth and reproductive material. | ||||||||
Stems | erect, eglandular or glandular-punctate, brown- to gray-pubescent, often becoming glabrescent. |
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Leaves | alternate, odd-pinnate, scented when crushed; stipules present, subulate, relatively small; petiolate; leaflets (5 or)7–47[–61], stipels usually present, subulate, blade margins entire, surfaces pubescent abaxially, brown glands sometimes present, glabrous or pubescent adaxially. |
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Inflorescences | (5–)30–100(–150)-flowered, usually terminal, rarely axillary, racemes (spikelike); bracts present, early-deciduous to persistent, minute, usually lanceolate; bracteoles minute or absent. |
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Flowers | fragrant, not typically papilionaceous; calyx funnel-shaped, pubescent, lobes 5; corolla white [yellow-white or pink], sometimes becoming purple, slightly irregular, petals scarcely differentiated, subequal, eglandular, glabrous; stamens 10, visible, diadelphous, filaments connate ca. 1/2 their lengths; anthers basifixed; style bent apically, often with gland at bend or near tip; stigma capitate. |
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Fruits | legumes, subsessile to short-stalked, laterally compressed, ovoid-ellipsoid, oblong, or oblong-lanceolate, indehiscent, glabrous. |
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Seeds | 1(or 2), obovoid, oblanceolate, or oblong-subreniform to falcate-ellipsoid. |
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x | = 10. |
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Eysenhardtia |
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Distribution |
sw United States; sc United States; Mexico; Central America (El Salvador, Guatemala) |
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Discussion | Species 10–15 (3 in the flora). Eysenhardtia is a complicated genus with unclear species boundaries, especially in Mexico. It is closely related to Amorpha, Apoplanesia, Errazurizia, and Parryella, all members of the papilionoid tribe Amorpheae (M. McMahon and L. Hufford 2004). The Mexican Eysenhardtia polystachya is reputed to be a New World source of lignum nephriticum, which was used to treat kidney ailments (J. M. Lang and D. Isely 1982). Wood chips from this plant, placed in water, produce a solution that fluoresces blue in bright light. The tropical Asian Pterocarpus indicus Willdenow also has been a source of lignum nephriticum. The chemical properties of these fluorescent solutions were described by M. Muyskens (2006). (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 | |||||||||
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Name authority | Kunth in A. von Humboldt et al.: Nov. Gen. Sp. 6(fol.): 382; 6(qto.): 489, plate 592. (1824) — name conserved | ||||||||
Web links |