Pediomelum |
Pediomelum canescens |
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breadroot, Indian breadroot |
buckroot |
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Habit | Herbs, perennial, unarmed; roots deep, apically swollen, woody, rarely fibrous with scattered tubers. | Herbs caulescent, to 100 cm, mostly glandular throughout and strigose or canescent. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | erect to ascending, decumbent, prostrate, or absent, glabrous or pubescent. |
usually 1, rarely 2, erect, unbranched proximally to much branched distally, leaves dispersed along distal branches; pseudoscapes 0; cataphylls 6–11 mm (when present), glabrous. |
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Leaves | clustered or alternate, usually palmate, pseudopalmate, or pinnately 3-foliolate (rarely phylloidal in P. rhombifolium), glandular or eglandular; stipules present; petiolate or sessile; stipels absent; leaflets (1–)3–7(or 8), blade margins entire, surfaces glabrous or pubescent. |
palmately 1 or 3-foliolate; stipules absent; petiole not swollen or jointed basally, slightly canaliculate, (0 or)2–6(–10) mm, usually shorter than petiolule, rarely to 1 mm longer, strigose; petiolules often adnate to leaf spur, 5–9 mm; leaflet blades broadly elliptic to obovate or oblanceolate to orbiculate, 3–5 × 2–3.2 cm, base attenuate, apex acute to rounded, surfaces abaxially densely canescent, adaxially glabrous or glabrate. |
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Inflorescences | 3–51-flowered, axillary, pseudoracemes; bracts present. |
persistent, loose, much of rachis exposed, ovoid-ellipsoid or shortly elongate; rachis loose, 1.5–5.5 cm, elongating in fruit, nodes (2 or)3–6, 3 flowers per node; bracts persistent or tardily deciduous, lanceolate to broadly elliptic, 7–12 × 4–5 mm, appressed-pubescent to canescent. |
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Peduncles | 2.7–8.2 cm, longer than subtending petiole, canescent. |
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Pedicels | 4–5 mm. |
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Flowers | papilionaceous; calyx campanulate, usually enlarging through fruiting, rarely not enlarging, but flaring backwards and tearing along a lateral sinus (P. tenuiflorum), lobes 5, abaxial often enlarged; corolla usually purple, blue, violet, or lavender, sometimes white, yellow or ochroleucous, rarely brick red or salmon-pink; stamens 10, diadelphous; anthers dorsifixed; style arched to sharply reflexed. |
11–16 mm; calyx broadly campanulate in fruit, 8–12 mm abaxially, 7–9 mm adaxially, glandular, strigulose to canescent; tube 3–5 mm; lobes triangular or narrowly elliptic, abaxial 4.5–6 × 2.5 mm, adaxial 2–3.5 × 1.5–2 mm; corolla blue to blue-purple, sometimes fading yellowish green, banner oblanceolate, 11–15 × 6–8 mm with claw 3–5 mm, wings 10–13 × 2.5–3 mm with claw 4–5 mm, keel 7.5–9 × 2–2.5 mm with claw 4–5 mm; filaments 9–9.5 mm; anthers broadly elliptic, 0.5 mm; ovary glabrous or pubescent, style pubescent on proximal 1/2. |
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Fruits | legumes, persistent on receptacle (except deciduous in P. tenuiflorum), sessile or short-stipitate, compressed, straight or curved, oblong, ellipsoid to lanceoloid, ovoid, obovoid, or globose, beaked, glabrous or pubescent, dehiscence circumscissile. |
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Legumes | ellipsoid, 5–6 × 4–5 mm, densely glandular, pubescent, beak 4–6 mm, equal to or slightly shorter than calyx. |
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Seed | 1, globose to ellipsoid, oblong, or reniform, usually smooth; hilum usually not surrounded by raised, white ridge. |
gray-green to red-brown, reniform, 4–5 × 3–4 mm. |
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x | = 11. |
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Pediomelum |
Pediomelum canescens |
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Phenology | Flowering summer. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Sandy soils, open woodlands, pine barrens. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 0–200 m. (0–700 ft.) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
North America; n Mexico |
AL; FL; GA; NC; SC; VA
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Discussion | Species 25 (25 in the flora). Pediomelum has been classically recognized as Psoralea Linnaeus, a genus now circumscribed for psoraleoid species primarily of Africa. P. A. Rydberg (1919–1920) segregated Pediomelum from Psoralea based on the transverse dehiscence of the pod and a gibbous calyx, characters also supported as diagnostic of Pediomelum by J. W. Grimes (1990), along with a persistent fruit base following dehiscence. Molecular phylogenetic studies have also confirmed the natural grouping that is Pediomelum (A. N. Egan and K. A. Crandall 2008). Psoralidium was dissolved, with remaining species placed in Ladeania. J. W. Grimes (1990) divided Pediomelum into three subgenera: subg. Leucocraspedon J. W. Grimes to accommodate two prostrate species with salmon, brick red, or yellowish flowers and a white ridge surrounding the hilum of the seed; subg. Pediomelum to accommodate those species that are usually caulescent and have a persistent inflorescence; and subg. Disarticulatum J. W. Grimes whose members are largely acaulescent and whose inflorescence becomes disjointed with age at the base of the peduncle. Molecular phylogenetic studies strongly support subg. Leucocraspedon, and somewhat follow membership of the other two subgenera, but not completely. Associations surrounding P. aromaticum and P. esculentum, in particular, are problematic (A. N. Egan and K. A. Crandall 2008, 2008b). Endemism is high in Pediomelum with most species having restricted geographical ranges. This, coupled with habitat degradation from grazing and urbanization, has resulted in a number of Pediomelum species being listed as rare, threatened, or endangered (K. S. Walter and H. J. Gillett 1998). The rapid and recent evolutionary diversification of Pediomelum may have contributed to the level of endemism within the group (A. N. Egan and K. A. Crandall 2008b) and has made species delimitation within the genus difficult. Considerable differences of opinion exist as to what criteria should be used for species delimitation and how many species exist within the genus, particularly for those in the southwestern United States. Several species of Pediomelum are of historical economic importance. Pediomelum esculentum was once an important starch source for Native American tribes of the Great Plains, as recorded on the historic Lewis and Clark Expedition (Mer. Lewis and W. Clark 2003). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Pediomelum canescens is found only in the Atlantic Coastal Plain in Florida and southern portions of Alabama and Georgia, with isolated populations known from the Carolinas and Sussex County, Virginia. It is well distinguished within the genus by the petioles being shorter than petiolules, particularly in middle and distal leaves. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 11. | FNA vol. 11. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | Psoralea subg. pediomelum | Psoralea canescens | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | Rydberg in N. L. Britton et al.: N. Amer. Fl. 24: 17. (1919) | (Michaux) Rydberg in N. L. Britton et al.: N. Amer. Fl. 24: 18. (1919) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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