Astragalus humistratus var. humivagans (Rydb.) Barneby

  • Authors

    Rupert C. Barneby

  • Authority

    Barneby, Rupert C. 1964. Atlas of North American Astragalus. Mem. New York Bot. Gard. 13(1): 1-596.

  • Family

    Fabaceae

  • Scientific Name

    Astragalus humistratus var. humivagans (Rydb.) Barneby

  • Type

    "Type collected at Mokiak Pass, Arizona, in 1877, Palmer 108..." Holotypus, GH! isotypi, NY, US!

  • Synonyms

    Batidophaca humivagans Rydb.

  • Description

    Variety Description - Densely strigulose and appressed-pilose or -pilosulous throughout, the hairs straight or nearly so and up to 0.8—1.4 (1.7) mm. long (the longest sometimes narrowly ascending or exceptionally spreading, the shortest rarely sinuous- crispate), the herbage cinereous, canescent, or silvery-silky; stems (0.6) 1-6 (8) dm. long; stipules (1.5) 2-9 mm. long; leaves (1) 1.5-6 (7.5) cm. long, the (7) 17 (19) leaflets (2) 5-17 (19) mm. long; peduncles 2—9 cm. long; racemes (3) 7-22-flowered, the axis 1-9 (13) cm. long in fruit; calyx (4.5) 5-7.4 (8.8) mm. long, the disc 0.6-1.2 mm. deep, the tube (2.4) 2.7-3.7 (4.1) mm. long, 2.1-3.2 (3.5) mm. in diameter, the teeth (1.4) 1.9-3.6 (5) mm. long; petals greenish-white or ochroleucous, commonly lined, suffused, or distally margined with dull purple, rarely all bright purple; banner 7.2-10.2 (11.6) mm. long, (5) 5.5-8.4 (9) mm. wide; wings (6.8) 7.4-9.5 (10) mm. long, the claws (2.2) 2.4-3.6 mm., the blades (4.4) 5-6.5 (7.1) mm. long, (1.5) 1.8-2.8 mm. wide; keel (6) 6.4-8.5 (9.1) mm. long, the claws 2.4-3.5 (3.8) mm., the blades (3.8) 4-5.6 (6) mm. long, 2.2-2.7 (3) mm. wide, the apex narrowly triangular or lanceolate and beaklike; anthers (0.4) 0.45-0.65 (0.7) mm. long; pod obliquely ovoid, obovoid, half-ovoid, or oblong-ellipsoid, (6) 8-14 mm. long, (3) 3.5-5.7 mm. in diameter, somewhat obcompressed in the lower half or third, either lunately incurved or straight below the deltoid or lance-acuminate, incurved beak, dorsally flattened or sulcate at base or from base to middle, the ventral suture acute and prominent, the valves thinly to quite densely strigulose with straight and appressed, or with incumbent and somewhat twisted hairs; ovules 10-16.

    Distribution and Ecology - Dry gravelly or sandy slopes and flats, chiefly with juniper and piñon but ascending southward into yellow pine forest, strongly calciphile north and west of the Colorado River but elsewhere occurring mostly on basalt or other rock, (4450) 4900-8000 feet, widespread and locally plentiful in northwestern Arizona and southwestern Utah, extending less commonly northwest into eastcentral and southern Nevada and southeast to the Little Colorado-Gila-Rio Grande watershed in eastcentral Arizona and adjoining New Mexico.—Map No. 41B.—May to September, but much more abundant in spring than after summer rains.

  • Discussion

    Westward and northward from the Grand Canyon, var. humivagans is the only representative of the ground-cover milk-vetch and is found almost exclusively on limestone in the pinon belt. In central Arizona it is sympatric with var. Hosackiae, which has similar pods but green foliage. Southeastward along the Mogollon Escarpment, in soils mostly of volcanic origin, it overlaps the range of vars. humistratus and crispulus, although it is ordinarily found at lower elevations than either of the latter. At anthesis it resembles var. sonorae very closely, but a count of the few ovules will presage a characteristically short pod; the two silvery varieties, however, are not known to occur in the same area. The var. humivagans varies greatly in stature. A form with exceptionally large flowers occurs on Kanab Plateau and near Mount Trumbull in Mohave County, Arizona (Peebles & Parker 14,730; McClintock 52-486, both CAS), and a gigas phase, in which large flowers are combined with greatly elongated calyx- teeth, was found growing with typical plants in the White Mountains (Barneby 5047 (gigas), 5048 (normal), both RSA). The pod varies from green to purplish or reddish when fresh, or is sometimes brightly mottled.

  • Objects

    Specimen - 01250236, R. C. Barneby 12911, Astragalus humistratus var. humivagans (Rydb.) Barneby, Fabaceae (152.0), Magnoliophyta; North America, United States of America, New Mexico, Catron Co.

    Specimen - 01250232, I. W. Clokey 8408, Astragalus humistratus var. humivagans (Rydb.) Barneby, Fabaceae (152.0), Magnoliophyta; North America, United States of America, Nevada, Clark Co.

    Specimen - 674531, M. E. Jones 5204y, Astragalus humistratus var. humivagans (Rydb.) Barneby, Fabaceae (152.0), Magnoliophyta; North America, United States of America, Utah

  • Distribution

    Arizona United States of America North America| Utah United States of America North America| Nevada United States of America North America| New Mexico United States of America North America|