ASTRAGALUS DOLINICOLA
Family:- LEGUMINOSAE/Subgen. TRAGACANTHA
Common Name:- None
Synonyms:- Astracantha dolinicola
Meaning:- Astragalus (Gr) Ankle-bone, (a plant with knotted roots).
Dolinicola Meaning unknown, but may refer to it's preferred habit i.e
dolines,
General description:- A perennial shrub with a low-habit, hummock-shaped and
with many branches.
Leaves:- Green, sparsely hairy; ending in a spine 20-50mm long, with 6-7 pairs 5-
12 x 0·5-2 mm, linear-lanceolate; stipules glabrous.
Flowers:- Yellow 10-12mm, and arranged in pairs in axils of leaves; bracts boat-
shaped like the prow of a canoe (navicular), lanceolate; bracteoles absent. Calyx c.
10 mm, hairless below, with dense hairs c. 1 mm long in the remaining part not
hidden by indumentum, the teeth slightly shorter than or almost as long as tube.
Standard 15-15 mm, pink with purplish veins, the limb oblong, sometimes slightly
constricted in the middle, with rounded auricles at base.
Fruit:- Legume c. 6.5 - 7 mm, ovoid-ellipsoid, covered with long, shaggy hairs.
(villous).
Key features:-
1) Legume6.5-7mm
2) Calyx ± glabrous below.
3) Leaflets sparsely pubescent, green.
Habitat:- Dolines among limestone outcrops, with deep, compressed, basic soil
rich clay. 1400-1500 m.
Distribution:- Rare Cretan Endemic. Confined to the Psiloritis massif.
Flowering time:- Probably from mid-May to end of June.
Photos by:- Fotis Samaritakis
FAMILY AND GENUS DESCRIPTIONS
LEGUMINOSAE
General description:- Trees, shrubs or herbs.
Leaves:- Alternate, rarely opposite, simple to 2-pinnate, stipulate.
Flowers:- Usually hermaphrodite, usually 5-merous. Sepals usually united. Petals
free or somewhat united (connate). Stamens usually 10, sometimes less than 10 or
numerous. Ovary a single, single-celled (unilocular) carpel; style 1.
Fruit:- A dehiscent (splitting open to release the seeds), 2-valved or indehiscent,
occasionally lomentaceous (a flat fruit, constricted between each seed) legume.
Seeds usually without endosperm.
A large number of species, both native and introduced, are cultivated for food, for
fodder and for ornament. Those most frequently utilized as food are to be found in
Cicer, Glycine, Glycyrrhiza, Lens, Pisum, Vicia and Vigna. The edible part is
usually the seed or legume, or both. Species of these genera and many others,
particularly in Anthyllis, Coronilla, Lathyrus, Lotus, Lupinus, Medicago, Melilotus,
Trifolium and Trigonella are cultivated for fodder on a large scale or are planted to
improve pasture.
ASTRAGALUS
General description:- Annual or perennial herbs or small shrubs.
Leaves:- unevenly or odd pinnate (imparipinnate) or evenly pinnate (paripinnate),
sometimes terminating in a spine; leaflets entire.
Flowers:- In racemes or axillary clusters, stemless or stemmed (sessile or
pedicellate). Calyx funnel-shaped (infundibuliform), tubular or bell-shaped
(campanulate), sometimes inflated in fruit, with distinct, equal or unequal teeth;
keel not ending abruptly in a very short, straight point (mucronate) at the apex (very
rarely adaxially mucronate); stamens 10, in two bundles and united by the
filaments (diadelphous) (very rarely 5, monadelphous); stigma and style glabrous.
Fruit:- Legume usually dehiscent, very varied in shape and texture, glabrous or
hairy, unilocular to bilocular. Seeds 1-many.
Key features:-
1) Stipules not forming spines.
2) Keel not dark red, black or beaked, but sometimes mucronate at the apex.
3) Leaves imparipinnate.
4) Umbels without an involucre.
5) Acaulescent herbs.
6) Mucro on the adaxial side of the keel.
7) Corolla c. 3 mm.
8) Stamens diadelphous.
9) Style glabrous.
Descriptions of peduncles and racemes refer to their appearance at anthesis; when
the length of the peduncle is compared with the length of the leaf, the leaf
subtending it is intended.
Subgen. TRAGACANTHA
General description:- Perennials, woody at the base; hairs simple.
Leaves:- Paripinnate, the rhachis ending in a sharp spine; stipules attached to,
surface to surface (adnate) to the petiole for at least ½ their length, but free from
each other.
Flowers:- In dense, sessile racemes in the axils of leaves, partly concealed by the
stipules, usually confined to the middle of the stem. Calyx not inflated in fruit,
hidden by its dense, covered with long, shaggy hairs (villous indumentum), the
teeth splitting to the base in fruit.
Fruit:- Legume c. 5 mm, ovoid-ellipsoid, villous.