Lupinus albifrons var. albifrons |
Lupinus albifrons |
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silver bush lupine, silver lupine, white-leaf lupine |
evergreen lupine, silver bush lupine, silver lupine, white-leaf bush lupine |
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Habit | Shrubs, 5–50 dm, usually with distinct trunk, green to silvery. | Subshrubs or shrubs, rarely perennial herbs, (1–)2–50 dm, usually silvery, sometimes greenish. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | decumbent to erect, clustered, branched or unbranched. |
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Leaves | silver-silky; petiole 2–5 cm. |
cauline, clustered near base or not; stipules 6–20 mm; petiole 1–8(–12) cm; leaflets 6–10, blades 10–45 × 4–18 mm, surfaces hairy. |
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Racemes | 8–30 cm. |
4–40 cm, rachis usually deciduous or semideciduous; flowers usually spirally arranged or loosely whorled. |
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Inflorescence | bracts 4–8 mm. |
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Peduncles | 5–13 cm; bracts deciduous, 4–24 mm. |
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Pedicels | 3–10 mm. |
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Flowers | 10–14 mm. |
10–18 mm; calyx bulge or spur 0–1 mm, abaxial lobe entire or 3-toothed, 6–10 mm, adaxial lobe deeply divided, 6–8 mm; corolla violet to lavender, patch usually yellow, rarely white, turning purple, banner usually hairy abaxially, rarely glabrous, keel usually unlobed proximally, adaxial margin usually ciliate middle to tip, abaxial margins glabrous. |
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Legumes | 3–5 cm, hairy. |
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Cotyledons | deciduous, petiolate. |
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Seeds | 4–9, mottled tan, 4–6 mm. |
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Lupinus albifrons var. albifrons |
Lupinus albifrons |
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Phenology | Flowering Mar–Jun. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Chaparral, foothill woodlands. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 0–1500 m. (0–4900 ft.) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
CA; OR |
w United States; n Mexico
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Discussion | Variety albifrons is known from much of coastal California, the Sierra Nevada Foothills, and southern Oregon (cismontane). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Varieties 8 (8 in the flora). Lupinus albifrons is the most common shrubby lupine in western North America. The combination of silver-pubescent leaves, banners that are pubescent abaxially, and keels that are usually ciliate will separate it from the coastal L. arboreus and the dune loving L. chamissonis. The desert L. excubitus is separated by petiole length, raceme rachis persistence and size, elevation, and distribution. Some of the varieties (austromontanus, collinus, and medius) are woody at base but can appear herbaceous. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 11. | FNA vol. 11. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | L. albifrons var. eminens, L. albifrons var. fissicalyx, L. brittonii, L. eminens, L. fissicalyx, L. fragrans | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | unknown | Bentham: Edwards’s Bot. Reg. 19: plate 1642. (1834) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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