Phaseolus |
Phaseolus smilacifolius |
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bean, wild bean |
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Stems | usually prostrate to climbing, rarely erect, striate, often lignescent, pubescent, covered with oblique to appressed, retrorse hairs, interspersed with finely uncinate, minutely hooked hairs. |
climbing or trailing, to 300 cm. |
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Leaves | alternate, odd-pinnate; stipules and stipels present (terminal ones ascending, those of lateral leaflets spreading), at times covered with glandular hairs, these nectariferous; petiole present, petiole and rachis canaliculate; leaflets 3, blade margins entire, surfaces glabrous or pubescent. |
stipules spreading, ovate to triangular, 2 × 1 mm; petiole 3.5–10 cm; rachis 1.5–4 cm; stipels lanceolate, 1.2 mm; leaflet blades ovate-lanceolate, distinctly 3-lobed, with rounded or quadrate lobes basally, 4–8 × 5 cm, membranous to slightly papery, venation not reticulate, base truncate, apex acute, surfaces glabrous. |
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Inflorescences | (1–)3–60+-flowered, terminal or axillary, usually pseudoracemes, rarely also with basal and lateral branches (compound racemes), (1 or)4–60 floral nodes, not swollen, often biflorous; primary bracts present, usually persistent, secondary bracts at base of pedicels; bracteoles minute or equal to calyx tube; bracts and bracteoles often nectariferous as stipules. |
with basal and lateral branches, 5–20 cm; main axis pubescent; rachis 7–8 cm, flowers loosely spaced on elongated axis, with to 7 biflorous nodes; bracts lanceolate, 1.3–1.5 × 1 mm, 3-veined. |
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Peduncles | 4–11 cm. |
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Pedicels | equal to or longer than calyx tube, arcuate or reflexed in fruit. |
5–15 mm, hairs straight or curved; bracteoles persistent, ovate-elliptic or oblong, 0.8 mm. |
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Flowers | papilionaceous; calyx campanulate or campanulate-tubular, lobes 5, usually shorter than tube, adaxial usually ± connate throughout; corolla pink, purple, red, violet, or white; banner glabrous abaxially, often hairy adaxially, slightly to strongly thickened at point of reflexion, often with two intramarginal thickenings; wings longer than other petals; keel beaked, apex 1.5–2 laterally and tightly coiled, coils 1.5–5.5 mm diam.; stamens 10, diadelphous, vexillary stamen dilated or with globose to bladelike appendage basally; anthers dorsifixed alternating with basifixed; pollen tricolporate to triporate, often with pseudocolpi; ovary with nectary disc at base, linear; stigma introrse, laterally or extrorsely placed because of stylar rotation, apical or extrorse. |
calyx campanulate, 3.2 mm, strigillose; lobes obtuse; corolla pink to purplish, 13 mm; banner broadly ovate, 9 mm, apex emarginate; wings obovate, 12–13 mm; keel 0.8 mm; ovary lanceolate, 5 mm. |
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Fruits | legumes, sessile or stipitate, usually falcate, sometimes straight, linear or oblong, short-beaked, usually elastically dehiscent, membranous, papery, or leathery, compressed or expanding over seeds, glabrous or pubescent. |
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Legumes | pendent, compressed, lanceolate-falcate, 53–60 × 8–10 mm, dehiscent, valves leathery, glabrous. |
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Seeds | 1–20, oblong, quadrate, suborbicular, or reniform; epihilum white. |
5 or 6, light brown, mottled black, ovoid, 4 × 3.5 mm, smooth; hilum lanceolate, 1 mm. |
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Vines | , annual or perennial, unarmed; roots tuberous or elongated (non-tuberous) taproots or fibrous. |
perennial, with tuberous taproots. |
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x | = 10, 11. |
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Phaseolus |
Phaseolus smilacifolius |
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Phenology | Flowering Aug–Sep. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Wet or mesic forests, coastal hydric hammocks, limestone soils. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 0–50 m. (0–200 ft.) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
North America; Mexico; Central America; West Indies; South America (n Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela); tropical to warm temperate areas |
FL |
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Discussion | Species 70 (12 in the flora). Phaseolus species share an indument of uncinate hairs, inflorescences with non-swollen floral nodes, bracts that are usually persistent, pedicels that are longer than the calyx tubes, and floral keel petals that are distally coiled laterally. The pseudoracemes or compound racemes have two (or three) flowers per node (this with a primary bract), and each flower is subtended by a secondary bract and two bracteoles covering partially or completely the sides of the calyx, at the apex of each pedicel. Some Phaseolus species develop reduced lateral inflorescences (G. Prenner 2013). The latter are referred to as panicles by G. F. Freytag and D. G. Debouck (2002). The seedlings have hypogeal or epigeal germination; in the flora area all species have hypogeal seedlings, except P. acutifolius and P. filiformis. A phylogenetic classification of the different groups of species in Phaseolus has been proposed (A. Delgado-Salinas et al. 2006). Phaseolus has five cultivated species, and at least two (P. lunatus Linnaeus and P. vulgaris Linnaeus) have numerous cultivars and are important sources of food worldwide. Four species (P. acutifolius, P. coccineus Linnaeus, P. lunatus, and P. vulgaris) are grown in the United States and have been reported to escape (D. Isely 1998). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Phaseolus smilacifolius is known from Alachua, Columbia, Levy, and Suwannee counties. G. F. Freytag and D. G. Debouck (2002) listed specimens from Texas under this species; these later were used to describe Phaseolus texensis (A. Delgado-Salinas and W. R. Carr 2007). Phaseolus smilacifolius has been proposed as a hybrid between P. polystachios and P. sinuatus; however, J. R. Abbott and W. S. Judd (2000) reported that plants in Waccasassa Bay State Preserve are distinctive and should be considered a separate species. (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. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | Alepidocalyx, Lipusa, Minkelersia | P. polystachios subsp. smilacifolius | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 2: 723. (1753): Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 323. (1754) | Pollard: Bot. Gaz. 21: 233. (1896) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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