Trifolium jokerstii
Novon 8: 91, fig. 1. 1998.
Herbs annual, 5–20 cm, glabrous. Stems erect-ascending, simple or cespitose, branched or unbranched. Leaves palmate; stipules ovate-lanceolate, 0.8–2 cm, margins toothed, apex rounded to acute; petiole 1–9 cm; petiolules 0.5 mm; leaflets 3, blades elliptic to obovate, 0.5–3.2 × 0.4–1.5 cm, base cuneate, veins fine to slightly thickened, margins usually serrulate, rarely nearly lobed, teeth shortly aristate, apex usually acute or obtuse, rarely emarginate, surfaces glabrous. Peduncles 2–15 cm. Inflorescences axillary or terminal, 10–30-flowered, subglobose, 1.2–3 × 1.2–3 cm; involucres widely campanulate to nearly flat, 6–11 mm. Pedicels straight, 0.5 mm; bracteoles absent. Flowers 10–16 mm; calyx campanulate, inflated in fruit, 7–9 mm, sparsely pubescent, veins 5, tube 3.5–4.5 mm, lobes unequal, abaxial and lateral 2- or 3-fid, adaxial unbranched, segments plumose, apex setaceous, orifice open; corolla yellow, 10–15 mm, banner broadly ovate, proximally inflated in fruit, distally narrowed into twisted tip, 10–15 × 3–5 mm, apex obtuse, truncate, or emarginate-apiculate. Legumes stipitate, ovoid, 3.3–3.5 mm. Seeds 1 or 2, dark brown, ellipsoid to mitten-shaped, 3.1–3.4 mm, rugose.
Phenology: Flowering Mar–May.
Habitat: Wet meadows, streamsides.
Elevation: 300–400 m.
Distribution
Calif.
Discussion
Trifolium jokerstii is known only from Butte County, from Table Mountain and along a stream adjacent to it (M. A. Vincent and R. Morgan 1998).
Selected References
None.