Dalea purpurea

Ventenat

Descr. Pl. Nouv., plate 40. 1801.

Common names: Purple prairie-clover
Endemic
Synonyms: Petalostemon purpureus (Ventenat) Ryberg
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 11.

Perennial herbs, erect to spreading, glabrous, puberulent, pilose, or tomentulose. Stems 2–9 dm, eglandular or with few scattered glands. Principal leaves 1.7–4(–4.5) cm; leaflets 3 or 5(or 7), blades linear to linear-elliptic, (7–)10–24(–28) mm. Peduncles (0–)3–15 cm. Inflorescences spikes, densely flowered, not involucrate, 7–12 mm diam.; axis not visible, (1–)1.5–7 cm; bracts persistent through anthesis, (2.3–)2.7–5.8(–7) mm. Calyces subsymmetric, 3.2–4.5 mm, pilosulous, base with antrorse hairs; tube (1.7–)2–2.8(–2.9) mm, with 0 glands between ribs, lobes lanceolate to ovate, adaxial pair broadest. Corollas rose, magenta, pale purple, lilac, or pink; not conventionally papilionaceous; banner (4.3–)4.7–6.7(–7.2) mm, blade ovate to suborbiculate, 1.7–2.6(–2.8) × 1.7–2.8(–3.2) mm; epistemonous petals attached at separation of filaments, blades 2.5–3.8(–4) × 0.8–1.3(–1.5)mm. Stamens 5, 5.6–8.5(–9) mm, filaments distinct to 3–5.2(–5.5) mm, anthers (0.7–)0.8–1.3(–1.4) mm. Legumes 2.1–2.6 mm, distally pilosulous and gland-dotted. Seeds 1.6–2.1 mm.

Distribution

North America.

Discussion

Varieties 2 (2 in the flora).

Dalea purpurea is characteristic of prairies and has a wide geographical distribution. It is sometimes culti­vated for its showy purple flowers and drought tolerance. Livestock find it palatable; it decreases with grazing.

Selected References

None.

Key

1 Spikes (8–)9.5–12 mm diam.; peduncles 0–10 cm (often absent or very short on side shoots). Dalea purpurea var. purpurea
1 Spikes 7–9 mm diam.; peduncles 3–15 cm. Dalea purpurea var. arenicola