Astragalus – Milk-vetch
Fabaceae

Milkvetches usually have several flowers (rarely single) in stalked clusters from leaf axils, generally showy, white or yellowish to reddish or purple. The banner of the corolla is usually well bent up from the wings, the wings are mostly longer than the blunt or rounded to slightly pointed keel. The fruits are pods, rounded or linear, straight to coiled, membranous or fleshy and with a woody or bony texture when dried, often conspicuously inflated, compressed either height- or side-wise, with one or both seams often intruded to form a partial to complete lengthwise wall which divides the pod into 2 compartments. The genus are annual to perennial herbs with odd-pinnate leaves in pairs, with one leaflet at the end, the leaflets usually jointed to the leaf axis. The stipules in pairs at the leaf stalk bases are free or joined to each other opposite the leaf stalks. petioles. The plants have various types of hairs, but they are usually flat-lying, mostly simple but sometimes attached near the middle or closer to one end, and thus 2-branched, referred to as dolabriform or T-shaped hairs.

The flowering plant genus Astragalus, the common name "milkvetch", containing upwards of 2500, mostly perennial species, are distributed primarily around the northern hemisphere and South America. Astragalus species are found mostly in cool temperate semi-arid and arid continental regions of the world. Many species are narrow endemics, often found in marginal habitats, while relatively few are widespread. Astragalus is especially diverse in southwest Asia, the Sino-Himalayan region, western North America, where we have about 400-450 species, and along the Andes in South America. Astragalus is also diverse in Mediterranean climatic regions, along the Pacific coasts of North and South America, and in southern Europe and northern Africa.

The recorded history of Astragalus dates back at least to the 1st century A.D., and the genus was well known to western European botanists of the 17th century. A number of species of Astragalus from southwest and southcentral Asia (e.g., A. gummifer, Iran) are the source of "gum tragacanth" - a substance tapped from roots or stems with hydrophilic and colloidal properties valuable in ice creams, lotions, pharmaceuticals, used since the time of ancient Greece. A few species are edible (A. canadensis, N. America) or have medicinal uses, and some are used for livestock forage (A. cicer, USA), but a large number of North American species are poisonous (e.g., A. mollissimus, N. America), especially to livestock and wildlife, a property due to the accumulation of selenium from soils or synthesis of toxic levels of certain nitrotoxins and alkaloids in the foliage - hence the name "locoweed" ("loco" is Spanish for crazy) given to many species of the Astragalus genus.

Guide to Identify Presented Species of Genus Astragalus
1.1.1. FLOWERS PURPLE OR PURPLE-TINGED, > 15 MM LONG.
PLANTS WITH MOSTLY UPRIGHT STEMS.
CLUSTERS WITH OFTEN AT LEAST 20 FLOWERS.
A. adsurgens – Standing Milkvetch
Stems 10-40 cm tall, with short, flat, stiff, T-shaped hairs. Prairie grassland. Flowers erect, purplish, 14-18 mm long. Calyx whitish- or blackish-flat-hairy. Leaves with 9-23 leaflets, with short, flat, stiff, T-shaped hairs. Stipules joined.
1.1.2. FLOWERS PURPLE OR PURPLE-TINGED, > 15 MM LONG.
PLANTS WITH MOSTLY UPRIGHT STEMS.
CLUSTERS WITH UP TO 20 FLOWERS.
A. agrestis – Field Milkvetch
Stems slender, creeping to erect, 10-30 cm tall. Moist spots in meadows. Flowers erect, ca 17 mm long, purplish. Calyx with blackish, spreading hairs. Leaves with 11-19 leaflets, with sparse, flat, short hairs. Stipules joined.
2.1.1.B. FLOWERS PURPLE OR PURPLE-TINGED, < 10 MM LONG.
PLANTS WITH MOSTLY UPRIGHT STEMS.
CLUSTERS WITH MOSTLY AT LEAST 10 FLOWERS.
A. flexuosus – Flexile Milkvetch
Stems 40-70 cm tall, flexile, short-flat-hairy. Plains and hills. Flowers pale purple or white, purplish-tinged, 6-10 mm long, the keel very short. Leaves with 15-21 leaflets, finely flat-hairy below, usually hairless above.
3.1.1. FLOWERS WHITE OR OCHROLEUCOUS, > 15 MM LONG.
PLANTS WITH MOSTLY UPRIGHT STEMS.
CLUSTERS WITH AT LEAST 10 FLOWERS.
A. drummondii – Drummond's Milkvetch
Stems 40-70 cm tall, grayish-long-stiff-hairy. Dry hillsides, plains and foothills. Flowers pale whitish, 18-25 mm long, drooping. Calyx finely black-hairy. Leaves with 13-31 leaflets, long-spreading-hairy on the lower surface.
3.2.2. FLOWERS WHITE OR OCHROLEUCOUS, > 15 MM LONG.
PLANTS WITH CREEPING OR TRAILING STEMS.
CLUSTERS WITH UP TO 3 FLOWERS.
A. gilviflorus – Plains Milkvetch
Plant tufted, stems 1-3 cm long. Dry, gravelly sites on the plains. Flowers 20-30 mm long, ochroleucous. Keel purple-tipped, very short. Leaves basal, 2-6 cm long, long-stalked, with 3 elliptic leaflets 1-3 cm long.
sdf sdfsdfsdf sdfsdfsdfsdf sdf sdfgdfgdfgdffdfg df hdfshsdfhsdfgdfgdfgdsf dfg dfg dfgdfg sddfgdf dsfgg
Copyright © Plant-Life.org