Astragalus yoderwilliamsii

Barneby

Brittonia 32: 30, fig. 1. 1980.

Common names: Osgood Mountains milkvetch
IllustratedEndemic
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 11.

Plants densely tuft-forming, diminutive, 1–3(–7) cm, sparsely strigulose; short caudex with thatch of persistent leaf bases. Stems erect or ascending, sparsely strigulose. Leaves 2.5–5.5 cm; stipules connate-sheathing and papery-membranous at proximal nodes, 1–2 mm; leaf­lets (7 or)9–17(or 19), blades obovate or narrowly elliptic, 1–3 mm, apex obtuse, surfaces sparsely strigulose; terminal leaflet smallest, jointed or continuous with rachis. Peduncles erect, 0–0.5 cm. Racemes 2–8-flowered; axis 1–3.5 cm in fruit. Flowers 5–7 mm; calyx 2.3–3.3 mm, strigulose, tube 1.5–2 mm, lobes subulate to triangular, 0.5–1 mm; corolla whitish, faintly veined pink; banner abruptly recurved; keel 4–4.5 mm. Legumes persistent, pendulous, stramineous, incurved, ellipsoid, sharply 3-sided compressed, 4–7 × 2–3 mm, thin becoming papery; valves inflexed, septum 1–2 mm wide; stipe 1–3 mm. Seeds 6–8.


Phenology: Flowering Jun–Jul.
Habitat: Sagebrush-rabbitbrush commu­nities, on decomposed granitic gravel.
Elevation: 1500–2200 m.

Distribution

Loading map...
Created with Raphaël 2.2.0

Idaho, Nev.

Discussion

Astragalus yoderwilliamsii, once thought to be restricted to the northern Osgood Mountains in Humboldt County, Nevada, precipitated the first emer­gency ruling under the Endangered Species Act because the species occurs within a region of mining activity. It is now also known from Elko County, Nevada, and Owyhee County, Idaho.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
Stanley L. Welsh +
Barneby +
Osgood Mountains milkvetch +
Idaho +  and Nev. +
1500–2200 m. +
Sagebrush-rabbitbrush communities, on decomposed granitic gravel. +
Flowering Jun–Jul. +
Illustrated +  and Endemic +
Papilionoideae de +
Astragalus yoderwilliamsii +
Astragalus sect. Neonix +
species +