Astragalus zionis

M. E. Jones

Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci., ser. 2, 5: 652. 1895.

Common names: Zion milkvetch
Endemic
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 11.

Plants mat- or tuft-forming, subacaulescent or shortly cau­lescent, 3–23 cm, densely villous-villosulous or strigulose, hairs basifixed; from branched caudex, sometimes with per­sistent thatch of leaf bases. Stems prostrate to ascending, 0–11 cm, internodes often con­cealed by white-hairy stipules and dense white hairs, villous-tomentulose. Leaves 2–15 cm; stipules sometimes shortly connate-sheathing at proximal nodes, 1.5–5.5 mm, submembranous becoming papery-scarious; leaflets 13–25, blades elliptic or ovate, 2–16 mm, apex usually acute, sometimes obtuse, surfaces silvery-villous. Peduncles 0.5–15 cm. Racemes 1–11-flowered, flowers ascending; axis 0.3–6 cm in fruit; bracts 2–5 mm; brac­teoles 0–2. Pedicels 1–3 mm. Flowers 18–26 mm; calyx cylindric, 8.3–18 mm, villous, tube 6.5–13.5 mm, lobes subulate, 1.5–5.7 mm; corolla often pink-purple, sometimes pale; banner recurved through 40°; keel concealing style, 14.6–18.6(–19) mm. Legumes ascend­ing, brightly purple-mottled, usually curved, obliquely ovoid-oblong, dorsiventrally compressed, ventrally grooved proximally, 15–35 × 5.5–12 mm, uni­locular, fleshy becoming somewhat woody, strigose or villosulous. Seeds 24–30.

Distribution

w United States.

Discussion

Varieties 2 (2 in the flora).

Astragalus zionis is a variable species, consisting of many isolated populations scattered throughout the deeply dissected sandstones of the Colorado Plateau. The connate stipules are anomalous among its close relatives. It is closely related to A. argophyllus, and sometimes differential characters are hard to find. Here it is maintained as a species because the connate stipules and mottled fruits are associated with ecological and distributional patterns.

Selected References

None.

Key

1 Plants mat- or tuft-forming, usually to 2.5 dm wide; legumes 15–25(–28) × 5.5–9 mm; Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah. Astragalus zionis var. zionis
1 Plants mat-forming, often very large, to 10 dm wide; legumes 25–35 × 9–12 mm; Pine Valley Mountains, Utah. Astragalus zionis var. vigulus