Lupinus croceus

Eastwood

Leafl. W. Bot. 2: 126. 1938.

Common names: Saffron-flowered lupine
Endemic
Synonyms: Lupinus croceus var. pilosellus (Eastwood) Munz L. pilosellus Eastwood
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 11.

Herbs, perennial, 4–6 dm, green, hairy. Cotyledons decid­uous, petiolate. Stems erect or ascend­ing, clustered, unbranched or branched. Leaves cauline; stip­ules not leaflike, green to silvery, 4–10 mm; petiole 2–8 cm; leaflets 5–9, blades 30–60 × 3–10 mm, adaxial surface pubescent or glabrous. Peduncles 2–6 cm; bracts tardily deciduous, 2–7 mm. Racemes 6–28 cm; flowers whorled or not. Pedicels 3–6 mm. Flowers 12–15 mm; calyx bulge or spur 0–1 mm, abaxial lobe 2 or 3-toothed, 6–7 mm, adaxial lobe 2-toothed, 4–6 mm; corolla bright yellow to orange-yellow, banner usually glabrous abaxially, sparsely hairy on ridge, keel upcurved, glabrous. Legumes 2–3.5 cm, hairy. Seeds 3–5, mottled tan, 6–8 mm.


Phenology: Flowering May–Aug.
Habitat: Dry, rocky places, yellow pine and fir forests, montane chaparral.
Elevation: 900–2700 m.

Distribution

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Calif.

Discussion

Lupinus croceus is known from the Cascade and Klamath ranges.

Herbs with spreading hairs and subequal calyx lobes have been called var. pilosellus.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Lupinus croceus"
Teresa Sholars +  and Rhonda Riggins +
Eastwood +
Saffron-flowered lupine +
900–2700 m. +
Dry, rocky places, yellow pine and fir forests, montane chaparral. +
Flowering May–Aug. +
Leafl. W. Bot. +
Lupinus croceus var. pilosellus +  and L. pilosellus +
Lupinus croceus +
species +