FABACEAE. Vol. II. 



i6. Astragalus eucosmos Robinson, rrelly 

 Milk Xutch. Kig. 2549. 



Pliaca clcgaiis Hook. I'l. Hor. Am, i : 144, 1830. 

 Astragalus oroboides var. americana A. Gray, Proc. Am. 



Acad. 6 : 205. 1864. 

 Phaca parvifioya Nutt. ; T. & G. Fl. N. A. i : 348. 1838. 

 A. cicgans Britton ; Britt. & Brown, IH. Fl. 2: 303. 1897. 



Not Bunge. 

 A. eucosmos Robinson, Rhodora 10: ^2,- 1908. 



Glabrous or nearly so, decumbent or nearly erect, 

 slender, somewhat branched, 10-20' higli. Stipules ovate, 

 acute, about 2" long : flowers bluish or purple, 3"-4" 

 long, in elongated spike-like racemes ; leaflets 9-17, ob- 

 long or lincar-oblong, 8"-io" long; pedicels at length 

 i" long; pod sessile, ellipsoid, i -celled, pendent, slightly 

 inflated, obtuse at each end, apiculate, black-pubescent 

 all over, 2"-^" long. 



Labrador, Quebec and northern Maine ; Saskatchewan 

 to Yukon and Colorado. June-Aug. 



17. Astragalus aboriginorum Richards. 

 Indian Alilk \'etch. I-'ig. 2550. 



Astragalus aboriginorum Richards. App. Frank. Tourn. 



28. 1823. 

 Phaca aborigina Hook. Fl. Bor. Am. i : 143. />/. 56. 1830. 

 Homalobus aboriginuni Rydb. in Britton, Man. 554. 1901. 



Finely canescent or glabrate. erect, somewhat 

 branched, 8'-i5' high. Stipules ovale, acute, mem- 

 branous or foliaceous, 2"-3" long; leaflets 9-13, 

 linear or oblong, obtuse or acute, 6"-io" long; flow- 

 ers white, tinged with violet, 4"-5" long, in rather 

 loose racemes ; peduncles longer than the leaves ; pod 

 slightly inflated, compressed, oval in section, i-celled, 

 glabrous, half-elliptic, long-stipitate, acute at each 

 end, slightly sulcate, the dorsal suture slightly in- 

 truded ; calyx blackish-pubescent, its teeth subulate. 



South Dakota to Manitoba, Alberta and Colorado. 

 Root long and yellow. " collected by the Cree and Stone 

 Indians in the spring as an article of food " (Richard- 

 son). May-June. 



18. Astragalus gracilis Xutt. Slender 

 ^lilk \'etch. Fig. 2551. 



Dalea parviflora Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. 474. 1814. 



Not A. parviflorns Lam. 1783. 

 Astragalus gracilis Nutt. Gen. 2: 100. 1818. 

 Astragalus microlobns A. Gray, Proc. .Am. .Acad. 6 : 



203. 1864. 

 Astragalus farviftorus MacM. Met. Minn. 325. 1892. 



Slender, erect, or ascending, finely pubescent, 

 i-2 high, simple or nearly so. Stipules ovate, 

 acute or acuminate, i2"-3" long; leaflets 7-21, 

 narrowly linear to linear-oblong, distant, obtuse, 

 truncate or emarginate at the apex. 4"-i2" long, 

 scarcely i" wide; flowers purple, 3"-4" long, in 

 narrow elongated spike-like racemes; pedicels i' 

 long or less; pods i-celled, sessile in the calyx, 

 pendent, straight, coriaceous, ellipsoid, finely ap- 

 pressed-pubescent with white hairs, or at length 

 glabrous or nearly so, transversely vemed, 2"-3" 

 long. 



Prairies and plains. Minnesota to Montana, Mis- 

 souri, Texas. Colorado and Wyoming. May-Tune. 



