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mu lan, true indigo

indigo

Habit Herbs or subshrubs, perennial, pubescent, hairs appressed, silvery, young growth and flowering parts covered with brownish hairs, becoming glabrate. Herbs, annual or perennial, subshrubs, or shrubs, unarmed.
Stems

erect or ascending, much branched, 5–20 dm.

erect, ascending, spreading, procumbent, or prostrate, usually pubescent (except glabrous in I. decora, I. pilosa pilose with biramous hairs, hairs dolabriform in part or throughout).

Leaves

3–10 cm;

stipules caducous, subulate, 1–2 mm;

petiole 0.4–1.2 cm;

stipels 1–1.5 mm;

petiolules 1–1.5 mm;

leaflets 7–15, opposite, blades broadly oblanceolate to obovate or elliptic, 10–25 × 3–10 mm, base cuneate, apex broadly rounded or truncate, slightly apiculate, surfaces pubescent abaxially, glabrous adaxially.

alternate, odd-pinnate [unifoliolate], not glandular-punctate [or glandular-punctate];

stipules present;

petiolate;

leaflets (1 or)3–17(or 19)[–23], opposite or alternate, stipels absent or evanescent, blade margins entire, surfaces glabrous or pubescent.

Racemes

5–25-flowered, dense, 0.5–4.5 cm.

Inflorescences

1–60+-flowered, axillary, racemes, often appearing spicate;

bracts present, caducous;

bracteoles absent.

Peduncles

0.1–0.5 cm.

Pedicels

1–2 mm.

Flowers

5–6 mm;

calyx 1.5 mm, lobes triangular;

corolla pink or salmon pink.

papilionaceous;

calyx campanulate, lobes 5;

corolla usually pink to red, salmon to maroon, orange-mauve to orange, or greenish yellow to ochroleucous, rarely white, 2.5–12(–14) mm;

petals caducous;

keel shorter than wings and banner;

wings auriculate;

keel with a pouch or spur extending outward from lateral surface;

stamens 10, diadelphous;

anthers uniform, basifixed, apiculate and initially gland-tipped;

ovary usually sessile.

Fruits

legumes, sessile or stipitate, terete, straight or curved, cylindric, ovoid, oblong, or ellipsoidal, 3–70 mm, ± dehiscent, usually septate, not constricted between seeds, margins smooth, often mottled inside, glabrous or pubescent.

Legumes

red-brown or dark brown, spreading or reflexed, cylindric, straight or slightly curved or abruptly upturned distally, 20–35 mm, thinly leathery, strigose.

Seeds

6–12, greenish to dark brown, cuboid-ellipsoidal.

1–12, ± cuboid to ellipsoidal.

x

= 6, 7, 8.

2n

= 16.

Indigofera tinctoria

Indigofera

Phenology Flowering year-round.
Habitat Ruderal areas, disturbed pinelands, hammocks.
Elevation 0–200 m. (0–700 ft.)
Distribution
from FNA
AL; FL; NC; SC; TN; s Asia (India) [Introduced in North America; introduced also in Mexico (Tabasco), West Indies (Bahamas, Cayman Islands, Cuba, Hispaniola, Jamaica, Lesser Antilles, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands), Central America, South America (Argentina, Venezuela), elsewhere in Asia, Africa, Australia]
[BONAP county map]
from USDA
North America; Mexico; Central America; South America; West Indies; Asia; Africa; Pacific Islands; Australia; tropical and temperate regions
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Indigofera tinctoria was an early source of a blue fabric dye (J. A. Duke 1981). It was widely cultivated in tropical areas around the world, and it has naturalized in many regions. Use of the plant as a dye source waned after introduction of a synthetic dye.

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

Species ca. 750 (14 in the flora).

Indigofera is easily recognized since all species have malpighian hairs that may be appressed or ascending and may have unequal branching; other types of hairs may also be present. In addition, the corollas range in color from shades of pink to red, salmon pink, orange, purplish red, or greenish yellow; petals are caducous; anthers are mucronate distally; seeds are cuboid or ellipsoid, and usually mottled. Another feature characteristic of Indigofera species is a floral-tripping mechanism in the flowers that results in a sudden release of pollen. If the base of the banner petal is touched, the claw splits and detaches from the calyx instantly, causing other petals to collapse and the pollen to be thrown from the anthers (F. H. G. Hildebrand 1866; G. Henslow 1867; A. W. Lievens 1992).

Indigofera includes species from which the blue dye indigo is produced. Some Indigofera species are grown as ornamental plants, especially woody species from southeast Asia and Australia, such as I. australis Willdenow, I. decora, I. heterantha Wallich ex Brandis, I. kirilowii, I. pendula Franchet, and I. pseudotinctoria Matsumura, some of which have escaped cultivation in the flora area.

Chromosome numbers reported in Indigofera are 2n = 8, 12, 14, 16, 32, to 48 (J. A. Frahm-Leliveld 1966; P. K. Gupta and K. Agarwal 1982; B. L. Turner 1956b).

Indigofera parviflora F. Heyne ex Wight & Arnott was collected by C. Mohr (US) as a waif on ballast spoils in Mobile, Alabama; I. trifoliata Linnaeus was found as a waif on chrome-ore piles in Maryland by Clyde F. Reed (MO). A specimen of I. heterantha Wallich ex Brandis (as I. gerardiana Graham ex Baker) was collected in 1979 in Los Angeles County, California.

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

Key
1. Flowers 12–18 mm; legumes glabrous, 25–70(–80) mm.
→ 2
2. Stems glabrous; racemes 8–15-flowered; stipules 1–2 mm; leaves 8–25 cm; leaflets 5–15[–23], 20–75(–100) mm.
I. decora
2. Stems sparsely pubescent; racemes 40–60+-flowered; stipules 4–6 mm; leaves 6–15 cm; leaflets (5 or)7–11, 15–40(–50) mm.
I. kirilowii
1. Flowers 2.5–12 mm; legumes pubescent, 3–35(–40) mm.
→ 3
3. Stems procumbent or prostrate; leaflets 3–11(–17), usually alternate, rarely opposite.
→ 4
4. Stems procumbent; leaflets similar in size within a leaf, blades oblanceolate, obovate, or narrowly elliptic, apex acute or truncate, surfaces glabrate to densely pubescent adaxially; peduncles 1.5–8 cm.
I. miniata
4. Stems prostrate; terminal leaflet usually larger than laterals, blades obovate to broadly oblanceolate, apex rounded to truncate, surfaces glabrous adaxially; peduncles 0.5–1 cm.
I. spicata
3. Stems usually erect, ascending, spreading, prostrate, or procumbent, sometimes scrambling or sprawling; leaflets 1–19, usually opposite (at least distally).
→ 5
5. Herbs; stems erect to ascending-spreading; leaflets 1 or 3, if 3, terminal leaflet 2–3 times larger than laterals; racemes 1–3-flowered.
I. pilosa
5. Herbs, subshrubs, or shrubs; stems usually erect, ascending, spreading, procumbent, or prostrate, sometimes scrambling or sprawling; leaflets 3–19, similar in size within a leaf; racemes 3–40+-flowered.
→ 6
6. Annual, biennial, or short-lived perennial herbs; stems, petioles, and legumes glandular, or brownish hirsute, or pilose, hairs long-spreading, or long-spreading intermixed with appressed.
→ 7
7. Herbs brownish hirsute or pilose, hairs long-spreading; racemes 10–20+-flowered, dense; flowers 6–7 mm.
I. hirsuta
7. Herbs glandular and pubescent, hairs intermixed long-spreading and appressed; racemes 3–10-flowered, lax; flowers 2.5–3 mm.
I. colutea
6. Perennial herbs, shrubs, or subshrubs; glands and brownish hairs absent, hairs appressed or ascending, or hairs crisped, curling.
→ 8
8. Perennial herbs; stems erect to procumbent; stems and petioles with crisped, curling hairs; c Texas.
I. texana
8. Perennial herbs, shrubs, or subshrubs; stems usually erect or ascending (usually procumbent, sometimes scrambling in I. oxycarpa); stems and petioles with appressed or ascending hairs; not confined to c Texas.
→ 9
9. Legumes ovoid, oblong, or ellipsoidal, straight, 3–9 mm; seeds 1–3.
→ 10
10. Herbs; leaflets (7 or)9–13; flowers 6–9 mm; legumes 7–9 mm, woody; seeds 2 or 3; se United States.
I. caroliniana
10. Shrubs or subshrubs, woody; leaflets 13–19; flowers 4.5–5.2 mm; legumes 3–3.5 mm, leathery; seed 1; Arizona, California, New Mexico.
I. sphaerocarpa
9. Legumes cylindric, straight or curved, 15–40 mm; seeds 4–12.
→ 11
11. Shrubs; stems usually procumbent, sometimes scrambling; leaflets 3–7, blade surfaces glabrate to appressed-pubescent adaxially; racemes 8–20 cm, lax, 20–40+-flowered.
I. oxycarpa
11. Herbs or subshrubs; stems erect or ascending; leaflets 7–17, blade surfaces glabrous, densely pubescent, or strigose adaxially; racemes 0.5–12 cm, lax or dense, 5–30+-flowered.
→ 12
12. Leaflet surfaces glabrous adaxially; legumes straight or slightly curved, or abruptly upturned distally.
I. tinctoria
12. Leaflet surfaces densely pubescent or strigose adaxially; legumes straight or slightly curved, or falcate.
→ 13
13. Legumes 18–25 mm, straight or slightly curved to falcate, cinereous-pubescent, base bulbous and reddish; racemes 5–12 cm, lax; flowers 6–8 mm.
I. lindheimeriana
13. Legumes 15–20 mm, strongly curved, strigose to glabrate, base not bulbous or reddish; racemes 3.5–5.5 cm, dense; flowers 5–6 mm.
I. suffruticosa
Source FNA vol. 11. FNA vol. 11. Authors: Alan W. Lievens, Michael A. Vincent.
Parent taxa Fabaceae > subfam. Faboideae > Indigofera Fabaceae > subfam. Faboideae
Sibling taxa
I. caroliniana, I. colutea, I. decora, I. hirsuta, I. kirilowii, I. lindheimeriana, I. miniata, I. oxycarpa, I. pilosa, I. sphaerocarpa, I. spicata, I. suffruticosa, I. texana
Subordinate taxa
I. caroliniana, I. colutea, I. decora, I. hirsuta, I. kirilowii, I. lindheimeriana, I. miniata, I. oxycarpa, I. pilosa, I. sphaerocarpa, I. spicata, I. suffruticosa, I. texana, I. tinctoria
Synonyms Anila tinctoria
Name authority Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 2: 751. (1753) Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 2: 751. (1753): Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 333. (1754)
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