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locust

desert locust, New Mexico locust

Habit Trees or shrubs, armed [unarmed], stipules spinescent. Shrubs or trees, 1–5(–15) m; branches tomentose to sericeous, eglandular.
Stems

erect to ascending, often root-sprouting, young growth glabrous, sericeous, tomentose, or hispid, hairs sometimes stipitate-glandular.

Leaves

alternate, odd-pinnate;

stipules present, caducous, or persistent becoming spinescent;

rachis canaliculate;

petiolate;

leaflets 7–45, usually opposite to subopposite, rarely alternate, stipels present, blade margins entire, surfaces glabrate or strigose to sericeous.

10–25 cm;

stipules 8–11 mm;

petiole 0.5–1.6 cm, tomentose to sericeous;

axis tomentose to sericeous, eglandular;

petiolules 2–3 mm, tomentose to sericeous;

leaflets 13–23, blades elliptic, 25–35 × 15–20 mm, surfaces strigose to sericeous.

Racemes

10–20-flowered, lax to erect, 3–10 cm, rachis tomentose to sericeous or hispid, sometimes with stipitate glands;

bracts lanceolate, 9–12 × 2–3 mm, margins entire.

Inflorescences

(3 or)4–25-flowered, axillary, racemes;

bracts present, caducous;

bracteoles absent.

Pedicels

3–5 mm.

Flowers

papilionaceous;

calyx zygomorphic, campanulate, lobes 5, abaxial longer than laterals, adaxial more connate than laterals;

corolla whitish or pinkish, glabrous;

stamens 10, diadelphous, filaments subequal;

anthers basifixed, relatively small, dehiscing longitudinally;

style glabrous, with pollen brush loosely scattered along 1 side distally;

stigma terminal, capitate, ciliate.

calyx tube 6–7 mm, tomentose to sericeous, sometimes with stipitate glands, lobes 5–7 mm;

corolla pinkish, 20–25 mm.

Fruits

legumes, sessile, laterally compressed, linear, placental margin not winged (narrowly winged in R. pseudoacacia), tardily, elastically dehiscent, not constricted between seeds, glabrous, hispid, or glandular-hispid.

Legumes

light to dark brown, 4–8 × 0.9–1.1 cm, hispid.

Seeds

3–10(–16), lenticular;

hilum slightly recessed.

4–10(–15).

x

= 10.

Robinia

Robinia neomexicana

Phenology Flowering spring–early summer.
Habitat Open, disturbed settings, exposed rocky outcrops, steep slopes, pine forests and woodlands.
Elevation 1500–2000 m. (4900–6600 ft.)
Distribution
from USDA
North America; n Mexico [Introduced in South America (Chile), Eurasia, Australia]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
AZ; CA; CO; NM; NV; TX; UT; WY; BC; Mexico (Chihuahua, Sonora)
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Species 4 (4 in the flora).

Robinia often colonizes disturbed settings in temperate deciduous and conifer forests, woodlands, and shrubby vegetation (D. Isely and F. J. Peabody 1984; M. Lavin and M. Sousa S. 1995). Robinia pseudoacacia is planted as a landscape and timber tree far outside its natural range, from which it has naturalized extensively; the remaining shrubby species are also cultivated as ornamentals, though less commonly and with less tendency to naturalize (Isely 1998)

Robinia is distinguished from other legume genera in the flora area by its fruits that are tardily dehiscent and not very elastically (or explosively) so. Seeds are transversely arranged; the hilum faces toward the base of the fruit rather than toward the placental margin. The placental (upper) margin is usually not winged except narrowly so in R. pseudoacacia. Each seed is borne from an elongate funiculus. The Robinia raceme also differs from that of its closest relatives in originating from leaf axils of the current season’s growth and in producing flowers that reach anthesis simultaneously.

Fossil wood that is indistinguishable from that of Robinia pseudoacacia is encountered from the Late Eocene to Miocene in the south-central and western United States (U. Prakash et al. 1962; Prakash 1968; L. C. Matten et al. 1977; M. Lavin et al. 2003). Fossil leaves dating to the Oligocene have been attributed to the genus with less confidence (D. Isely 1998; Lavin et al.).

Robinia represents one of relatively few temperate North American lineages to have evolved from neotropical ancestry (as in Strophostyles; E. T. Riley-Hulting et al. 2004). Most temperate North American legume groups (such as Astragalus, Lupinus, and Vicia) originate from Eurasia. Similar to neotropical relatives, Robinia species primarily occupy disturbance-prone habitats and often root-sprout on unstable or exposed soils; they can form dense colonies that stabilize loose soil. Their growth habit ranges from shrubs to trees; R. pseudoacacia generally adopts a large-tree habit most consistently. Variation in such growth form is likely a function of disturbance. The smaller the stature of the plant, the more likely the habitat disturbance is regular or recent. Growth of Robinia species also appears to be regulated more by temperature than day length, which could be a result of a recent tropical ancestry. Consequently, Robinia seems outcompeted in undisturbed settings and is prone to die back related to cold temperatures. Apart from a variable shrub to tree growth form, this may explain the generally crooked stems and unkempt appearance of many Robinia individuals and populations.

With exception to the predominantly white-petaled and outcrossing Robinia pseudoacacia (B. C. Bongarten 1992), the three predominantly pink-petaled species (R. hispida, R. neomexicana, and R. viscosa) harbor much interpopulation variation that is often recognized formally at the species or infraspecific level (W. W. Ashe 1922). This variation is often the result of hybridization (for example, R. viscosa var. hartwigii), clonal variation due partially to reproduction involving triploidy (as in segregates of R. hispida), plasticity of growth form (R. hispida var. nana), or geographic structuring (R. neomexicana var. rusbyi) (D. Isely and F. J. Peabody 1984). None of the historically recognized intraspecific variation is treated formally here. The taxonomy of Robinia would be better served with genetic data and analyses that bear on the origins of asexual races rather than application of formal taxonomic names to every variant and intermediate form.

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

Robinia neomexicana is native in the United States and Mexico, and is introduced in British Columbia.

The tomentose to sericeous leaf axes and branches, often stipitate-glandular inflorescence rachises, often conspicuously hispid fruits, and distribution in southwestern United States and adjacent Mexico distinguish Robinia neomexicana from other pink-petaled Robinia species. Forms of R. neomexicana without the hispid indument and glandular hairs on the inflorescence rachises and fruits retain the relatively abundant tomentose to sericeous indument on the leaves and branches.

D. Isely and F. J. Peabody (1984) and Isely (1998) recognized two weakly differentiated and largely sympatric varieties of Robinia neomexicana: var. neomexicana with ovaries and fruits sparsely hispid to strongly glandular-hispid and var. rusbyi with ovaries and fruits glabrous at maturity.

Nothospecies based on putative hybrids involving Robinia neomexicana and R. pseudoacacia, R. × holdtii Beissner and R. × coloradensis Dode, are found in the range of R. neomexicana where R. pseudoacacia has been planted.

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

Key
1. Corollas usually whitish, rarely pinkish, 15–20 mm; racemes pendent, (10–)15–25-flowered; legumes glabrous, placental margin narrowly winged; raceme rachises eglandular; calyx sericeous, lobes shorter than tube.
R. pseudoacacia
1. Corollas pinkish, 20–25 mm; racemes lax to ascending or erect, (3 or)4–20-flowered; legumes hispid or glandular-hispid, placental margin not winged; raceme rachises sericeous, tomentose, or hispid, sometimes glandular; calyx sericeous, tomentose, or hispid, some­times glandular, lobes slightly longer to slightly shorter than tube.
→ 2
2. Branches and leaf axes tomentose to sericeous, eglandular; leaflet surfaces strigose to sericeous.
R. neomexicana
2. Branches and leaf axes hispid or glandular; leaflet surfaces: abaxial glabrate and adaxial strigose to sericeous, or abaxial sericeous and adaxial glabrate.
→ 3
3. Branches and leaf axes hispid, hairs conspicuous or indurate, 1–5 mm, or without sessile or stipitate glands; floral bract margins entire; leaflets 7–13, surfaces glabrate abaxially, strigose to sericeous adaxially.
R. hispida
3. Branches and leaf axes glandular, glands sessile or stipitate; floral bract margins toothed; leaflets 13–25, surfaces sericeous abaxially, glabrate adaxially.
R. viscosa
Source FNA vol. 11. Authors: Matt Lavin, Thomas G. Lammers. FNA vol. 11.
Parent taxa Fabaceae > subfam. Faboideae Fabaceae > subfam. Faboideae > Robinia
Sibling taxa
R. hispida, R. pseudoacacia, R. viscosa
Subordinate taxa
R. hispida, R. neomexicana, R. pseudoacacia, R. viscosa
Synonyms R. breviloba, R. luxurians, R. neomexicana var. rusbyi, R. rusbyi, R. subvelutina
Name authority Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 2: 722. (1753): Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 322. (1754) A. Gray: Pl. Nov. Thurb., 314. (1854) — (as neo-mexicana)
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