Astragalus canadensis

Linnaeus

Sp. Pl. 2: 757. 1753.

Common names: Canada milkvetch
Endemic
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 11.
Revision as of 18:52, 12 March 2025 by imported>Volume Importer
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Plants usually robust, rarely quite slender, (10–)15–120(–160) cm, strigose; from oblique or horizontal rhizomes. Stems usually erect, sometimes decum­bent and ascending, green or purplish, fistulose when stout, 1–7+ cm underground, strigose. Leaves (3–)5–25(–35) cm; stip­ules 3–18 mm, membranous early becoming scarious; leaflets (7–)13–35, blades lanceolate, lanceolate-oblong, or elliptic, (5–)6–45(–52) mm, apex obtuse, apiculate, or truncate-emarginate, surfaces strigose, sometimes glabrous adaxially. Peduncles erect or incurved-ascending, (2.5–)4–22 cm. Racemes 20–100+-flowered, flowers spreading-declined; axis 2.5–16 cm in fruit; bracts 1.5–10 mm; bracteoles 0–2. Pedicels 1.2–3.5(–4) mm. Flowers 11.3–17(–17.5) mm; calyx short-cylindric, (4.6–)5.5–10.5(–11) mm, strigose or pilosu­lous, tube 4–8.5 mm, lobes subulate or trian­gular, 1.2–4.4(–5) mm; corolla ochroleucous, greenish white, or stramineous; keel (9.5–)10.2–13.6 mm. Legumes brown then blackish, straight or incurved, cylindroid, terete, (9–)10–20 × 2.9–5.2 mm, somewhat fleshy becoming stiffly papery or leathery, usually stri­gose, strigulose, glabrate, or glabrous, rarely puberulent; sessile or subsessile. Seeds (16–)18–26(–28).

Distribution

North America.

Discussion

Varieties 3 (3 in the flora).

The chromosome number of 2n = 16 is in harmony with the view that the alliance of Astragalus canadensis, along with its near relative A. oreganus, is with the Asiatic A. uliginosus Linnaeus. The relationship is suf­ficiently close that R. C. Barneby (1964) said of the Canada milkvetch, the New World’s most widely dis­persed Astragalus, that taxonomy would most closely reflect biological realities if the New World forms were reduced to varietal status under a bicentrically dispersed A. uliginosus.

Selected References

None.

Key

1 Legumes not grooved dorsally, usually glabrous, rarely puberulent or strigulose; distribution primarily eastern, extending westward to New Mexico, Utah, Idaho, British Columbia, and Northwest Territories. Astragalus canadensis var. canadensis
1 Legumes grooved dorsally, strigose or glabrate; distribution largely intermontane, extending eastward to Black Hills of South Dakota. > 2
2 Stems (25–)30–70(–90) cm; calyx lobes (1.5–)2–4.4 mm, adaxial pair usually not much broader (though sometimes shorter) than the rest; legume beaks (3–)3.5–5 mm; forest belt of n Rocky Mountains (British Columbia southward to Oregon, eastward to Montana). Astragalus canadensis var. mortonii
2 Stems (10–)15–55(–75) cm; calyx lobes 1–2.5(–3) mm, adaxial pair nearly always broadly triangular or deltate (and mostly shorter) than the rest; legume beaks 1.5–3 mm; sagebrush valleys, less commonly in meadows, and xeric pine forests (British Columbia southward to California, eastward to Colorado and Montana). Astragalus canadensis var. brevidens