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Photo is of parent taxon

Beringian locoweed, boreal locoweed

Photo is of parent taxon

boreal locoweed

Habit Plants usually 8–30 cm. Plants usually 4–12(–18) cm.
Leaves

4–25 cm;

leaflets 19–35, blades 4–18 mm.

1–18 cm;

leaflets (17 or)19–27(–37), blade apex acute to obtuse or rounded.

Racemes

8–25-flowered, compact to loose.

5–10-flowered, subcapitate or loose.

Peduncles

4–20+ cm, axis often (2–)3–15 cm in fruit, pilose.

4–15 cm, subequal to or surpassing leaves, axis 0.5–2.5 cm in fruit, densely hirsute at least distally, hairs fuscous or mixed black and paler.

Corollas

white or bluish, keel tips maculate, 9–21 mm;

wing blades not especially dilated distally.

purple, lilac, or whitish, 13–17 mm;

wing blades dilated distally to 3.5–5 mm.

Calyces

6–9 mm, tube 5–7 mm, lobes 2–4 mm, prominently tuberculate.

8–10(–12) mm, tube 5–6 mm, lobes (2–)3–4(–8) mm.

Legumes

8–15 × 5–7 mm.

10–18 × 5–7 mm.

2n

= 48.

Oxytropis borealis var. sulphurea

Oxytropis borealis var. borealis

Phenology Flowering summer. Flowering summer.
Habitat Roadsides, gravel bars, ridge crests in boreal forests, shrublands, meadows. Gravel bars, ridge crests, rocky sites.
Elevation 900–1300 m. (3000–4300 ft.) 0–1000 m. (0–3300 ft.)
Distribution
from FNA
AK; BC; YT
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
AK; NT; YT; e Asia (Chukchi Peninsula)
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

There are many transitional forms between vars. sulphurea and viscida in the broad sense. The materials included here are plottable in the herbarium and notable in the field. Many of the plants are small-flowered (ca. 12 mm) and, consequently, have narrow racemes. Large-flowered phases are present and, in some, the bracts are very long, surpassing the flowers at anthesis.

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

Variety borealis is readily identified by the combination of relatively few leaflets, many flowers, and condensed, copiously hirsute inflorescences. Specimens from the interior, such as those in Denali National Park and at Black Rapids Glacier, Alaska, have racemes somewhat elongate and wing petals particularly widened near the apex.

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

Source FNA vol. 11. FNA vol. 11.
Parent taxa Fabaceae > subfam. Faboideae > Oxytropis > Oxytropis borealis Fabaceae > subfam. Faboideae > Oxytropis > Oxytropis borealis
Sibling taxa
O. borealis var. australis, O. borealis var. borealis, O. borealis var. hudsonica, O. borealis var. viscida
O. borealis var. australis, O. borealis var. hudsonica, O. borealis var. sulphurea, O. borealis var. viscida
Synonyms O. viscidula subsp. sulphurea O. uralensis var. subsucculenta, O. viscida var. subsucculenta
Name authority (A. E. Porsild) S. L. Welsh: Great Basin Naturalist 50: 358. (1991) unknown
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