FABACEAE. 



Vol. II. 



4. Geoprumnon tennesseense (A. Gray) 



Kydb. Tennessee .Milk V'etch. 

 1^'ig- 2533. 



Astragalus tennesseensis A. Gray ; Chapm. Fl. S. 



States. 98. 1S60. 

 Astragalus plattensis var. tennesseensis A. Gray, 



Proc. Am. Acad. 6: 193. 1864. 

 G. tennesseense Rydb. in Small, FI. SE. U. S. 615. 



1903. 



Stems erect or ascending from a deep root; 

 plant villons with long whiti.sh hairs. Leaflets 

 15-31. oblong, or lincnr-ohlong, obtuse, or 

 emarginate, nearly glabrous above, 6"-io" long, 

 2"-4" wide ; stipules lanceolate, oval, or ovate- 

 lanceolate; peduncles about equalling the 

 leaves ; racemes short, several-many-flowered ; 

 flowers about 10" long; pod oblong, conic, 

 fleshy, i' long or rather more, strongly wrin- 

 kled, at least W'hen dry, its summit strongly 

 curved. 



On hillsides, Illinois to Tennessee, Alabama and 

 Missouri. March-May. 



26. ASTRAGALUS [Tourn.] L. Sp. PI. 755. 1753. 



Herbs, sometimes woody, mostly with odd-pinnate leaves of several or many leaflets, 

 and purple violet white or yellow flowers in spikes or racemes, or rarely umbellate or solitary. 

 Stipules present. Caly.x tubular, its teeth nearly equal. Petals clawed ; standard erect, ovate 

 or oblong; wings oblong; keel obtuse, about equalling the wings. Stamens diadelphous ; 

 anthers all alike. Ovary sessile or stipitate ; ovules 00. Pod sessile or stalked, dehiscent. 

 l-2-celled, very different in different species and affording the best characters in classification, 

 accepted as generic by some authors. [Greek name of some leguminous plant.] 



At least 1000 species, of wide geographic distribution, most abundant in northern Asia. In 

 addition to the following, at least 175 others occur in the western and southern United States. Type 

 species: Astragalus Onobrychis L. 



* Pod 2-cened. 

 Plant densely villous-pubescent all over. i. A. mollissimus. 



Plants glabrous, or grayish-pubescent. 



Flowers yellowish ; pod terete, glabrous. 2. A. caroliniamis. 



Flowers purple ; pod with a deep furrow, pubescent. 



Pod finely appressed-pubescent. 3. A. adsurgens. 



Pod densely villous with white hairs. ' 4. A. Hypoglottis. 



** Pod I -celled, but one or both sutures sometimes intruded. 

 Pod 2-grooved on the upper side (genus Dihotcus Rydb. 1. 5. A. bisulcatus. 



Pod not 2-grooved. 



Pod slightly fleshy; leaflets persistent (genus CtenofhyUum Rydb.). 6. A. pectinatus. 



Pod papery or leathery ; leaflets deciduous. 



Pod cordate or triangular in section, the dorsal suture intruded (only slightly intruded in A. 

 , Robbinsii). 



Pod straight or nearly so (genus Tium Medic). 

 Flowers white or yellowish-white. 



Pod triangular in cross-section ; plant appressed-pubescent ; western. 



7. A. racemosus. 

 Pod cordate in cross-section ; plant villous-pubescent ; western 8. 

 Pod somewhat compressed, the dorsal .suture-scarcely intruded. 9. 

 Flowers purple. 



Pod densely blackish or brownish-pubescent ; stems diffuse. 10. A. 

 Pod finely pubescent ; stem erect. 11, A. 



Pod crescent-shaped (genus Holcophacos Rydb.). 12. A 



Pod neither cordate nor triangular in cross-section, the dorsal suture not intruded. 

 Plants scapose, or very short-stemmed (genus Xylophacos Rydb.). 



Plant villous: flowers yellow. 13- A. lotifiorus. 



Plants silky or silvery-canescent : flowers blue, violet or purple. 



Pod straight or nearly so. nearly circular in cross-section. 14. 



Pod cur\'ed. 8-shaped in cross-section. 15. 



Plants leafy-stemmed. 



Pod flattened, with a partial partition (genus Atelophragma Rydb.). 

 Pod sessile, lilack-pubescent. 16. 



Pod stipitate. glabrous. I7* 



Pod not flattened, completely i-celled. 



Pods small, transversely wrinkled, coriaceous (genus Microphacos Rydb.). 



" A. gracilis. 



A, Drummondii. 

 A. Robbinsii. 



alpittus. 

 Blakei. 

 distortus. 



A. missouriensis. 

 A. Shortianus, 



A. eucosmos. 



A. aboriginorum. 



Pods large, smooth, papery. 



18. 



19. A. flcxuosus. 



