Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Oxytropis lambertii

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Kingdom
  
Family
  
Tribe
  
Galegeae

Scientific name
  
Oxytropis lambertii

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Subfamily
  
Genus
  
Oxytropis

Higher classification
  
Oxytropis

Oxytropis lambertii wwwminnesotawildflowersinfoudatar9ndp23qpdox

Similar
  
Oxytropis, Oxytropis sericea, Legumes, Astragalus mollissimus, Astragalus lentiginosus

Oxytropis lambertii is a species of flowering plant in the legume family known by several common names, including purple locoweed, woolly locoweed, and Lambert crazyweed.

Contents

Oxytropis lambertii Southwest Colorado Wildflowers Oxytropis lambertii

Distribution

Oxytropis lambertii Oxytropis lambertii Colorado Wildflowers

It is native to grasslands in the Canadian Prairie of central Canada and in the mid-west and Great Plains of the United States.

Description

Oxytropis lambertii Oxytropis lambertii photos Saskatchewan Wildflowers

Oxytropis lambertii is a perennial herb producing a patch of basal leaves around the root crown, and several showy erect inflorescences. The leaf is compound with several silvery-green leaflets. The inflorescence produces several flowers, each borne in a tubular purple or pinkish calyx of sepals covered thinly in silver hairs. The pealike flower corolla is reddish or bluish purple with a lighter patch at the base of the banner. The fruit is a cylindrical legume pod.

Toxic

Oxytropis lambertii Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness Oxytropis lambertii

The Oxytropis lambertii plant is one of the locoweeds most frequently implicated in livestock poisoning. The toxin is called swainsonine. Research suggests that the plant itself may not be toxic, but becomes toxic when inhabited by endophytic fungi of the genus Embellisia, which produce swainsonine.

Oxytropis lambertii Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness Oxytropis lambertii

References

Oxytropis lambertii Wikipedia