The green links below add additional plants to the comparison table. Blue links lead to other Web sites.
enable glossary links
Photo is of parent taxon

field locoweed, Wanapum crazyweed, Wanapum locoweed

Photo is of parent taxon

Davis locoweed, Davis' field locoweed, Davis' oxytrope

Habit Plants (10–)13–21 cm, herbage silky-pilose, canescent. Plants 9–45 cm, herbage strigose, strigulose, or pilose.
Leaves

(11–)14–18(–22) cm;

stipules pilose abaxially, margins ciliate;

leaflets (13–)19–25(–33), scattered or subopposite, blades linear to narrowly oblong, (8–)15–25(–33) mm.

3–17(–25) cm;

stipules free ends 5–6 mm, sparsely pilose abaxially, margins ciliate, sometimes also with clavate processes;

leaflets 25–39(–45), sometimes fasciculate, blades 4–20(–29) mm.

Racemes

(5 or)6–12-flowered.

10–30+-flowered, elongate in fruit.

Peduncles

(10–)17–21(–30) cm, axis (4–)6–8(–12) cm in fruit.

5–35(–38) cm, axis 2–8(–14) cm in fruit.

Corollas

pale lavender, banner veined, keel tip maculate with purplish blue, 14–20(–23) mm.

usually pink-purple and fading dark purple, or bluish, sometimes polychrome, 14–19 mm.

Calyces

tube 5–7 mm, lobes (1–)2–3 mm.

tube 4.2–6(–6.5) mm, lobes 1.3–3 mm.

Legumes

13–23 × 3.5–5 mm.

10–14 × 3.5–5 mm.

2n

= 32.

Oxytropis campestris var. wanapum

Oxytropis campestris var. davisii

Phenology Flowering spring. Flowering spring–early summer.
Habitat Gravelly ridges above steep north-facing basalt talus. Gravelly sites in boreal forests.
Elevation 600 m. (2000 ft.) 900–1500 m. (3000–4900 ft.)
Distribution
from FNA
WA
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
AB; BC; NT
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Variety wanapum is restricted to xeric, basaltic gravels, talus, or outcrops in Grant County. Its flowers, suffused with purple, are diagnostic since no other varieties of the species in the Pacific Northwest typically have colored flowers. The narrow-bladed leaflets tend to be involute and to vary in number, usually 19–25. These vegetative features are unlike any of the other several varieties of Oxytropis campestris that occur elsewhere in North America and have lavender to purplish flowers.

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

Variety davisii is readily distinguished by the combination of its colorful flowers, fasciculate leaflets (or the tendency toward fasciculate leaflets), and elongate inflorescences. It forms apparent intermediates with Oxytropis sericea var. speciosa and at the southern portion of its range is more or less transitional to var. spicata. A relationship with var. johannensis cannot be discounted, especially with those portions of that variety with fasciculate leaflets. Specimens transitional to O. splendens make assignment of materials to one or the other difficult in particular instances.

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

Source FNA vol. 11. FNA vol. 11.
Parent taxa Fabaceae > subfam. Faboideae > Oxytropis > Oxytropis campestris Fabaceae > subfam. Faboideae > Oxytropis > Oxytropis campestris
Sibling taxa
O. campestris var. chartacea, O. campestris var. columbiana, O. campestris var. cusickii, O. campestris var. davisii, O. campestris var. dispar, O. campestris var. johannensis, O. campestris var. jordalii, O. campestris var. minor, O. campestris var. roaldii, O. campestris var. spicata, O. campestris var. varians
O. campestris var. chartacea, O. campestris var. columbiana, O. campestris var. cusickii, O. campestris var. dispar, O. campestris var. johannensis, O. campestris var. jordalii, O. campestris var. minor, O. campestris var. roaldii, O. campestris var. spicata, O. campestris var. varians, O. campestris var. wanapum
Synonyms O. davisii, O. jordalii subsp. davisii
Name authority Joyal: Great Basin Naturalist 50: 373, fig. 1. (1991) S. L. Welsh: Leafl. W. Bot. 10: 25. (1963)
Web links