Difference between revisions of "Galactia regularis"

From Coastal Plain Plants Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Description)
 
(89 intermediate revisions by 16 users not shown)
Line 15: Line 15:
 
| binomial_authority = (L.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.
 
| binomial_authority = (L.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.
 
| range_map = GALA_REGU_dist.jpg
 
| range_map = GALA_REGU_dist.jpg
| range_map_caption = Natural range of ''Galactia regularis'' from USDA NRCS [http://www.plants.usda.gov Plants Database].
+
| range_map_caption = Natural range of ''Galactia regularis'' from USDA NRCS [http://www.plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=GARE2 Plants Database].
 
}}
 
}}
  
 
Common name: eastern milkpea
 
Common name: eastern milkpea
 +
==Taxonomic notes==
 +
Synonyms: ''Galactia volubilis'' (Linnaeus) Britton<ref name=weakley>Weakley, A.S. 2020. Flora of the Southeastern United States. Edition of 20 October 2020. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.</ref>
 +
 +
Varieties: ''G. macreei'' M.A. Curtis<ref name=weakley/>
  
 
==Description==  
 
==Description==  
 
<!-- Basic life history facts such as annual/perrenial, monoecious/dioecious, root morphology, seed type, etc. -->
 
<!-- Basic life history facts such as annual/perrenial, monoecious/dioecious, root morphology, seed type, etc. -->
 +
''G. regularis'' is a prostrate perennial with showy violet-purple flowers, frequently found climbing over bushes.<ref name=graham>Graham, E. H. (1941). Legumes for erosion control and wildlife. Washington, USDA</ref> Stems have been observed to twine on low shrubs.<ref name=fsu>Florida State University Robert K. Godfrey Herbarium database. URL: http://herbarium.bio.fsu.edu. Last accessed: July 2015. Collectors: Loran C. Anderson, H. E. Ahles, Tom Barnes, Michael B. Brooks, Robert W. Simons, Dianna Hall, R. Kral, R. K. Godfrey, Sidney McDaniel, R. A. Norris, H. R. Reed, Cecil R. Slaughter, Frankie Snow, A. E. Redford, C. Simon, A. A. Eaton, Robert L. Lazor, Bruce Hansen, JoAnn Hansen, W. A. Silveus, A. F. Clewell, Robert Blaisdell, O. Lakela, George R. Cooley, Richard J. Eaton, Daniel B. Ward, Paul O. Schallert, A. H. Curtiss. States and Counties: Florida: Bay, Brevard, Clay, Dixie, Duval, Escambia, Franklin, Flagler, Gadsden, Hillsborough, Jackson, Jefferson, Leon, Levy, Liberty, Madison, Nassau, Osceola, Putnam, Sarasota, St. Johns, Taylor, Wakulla, Washington. Georgia: Camden, Coffee, Grady. Mississippi: Pearl River, Oktibbeha. North Carolina: Alexander. South Carolina: Hampton. Virginia: Pulaski. Compiled by Tall Timbers Research Station and Land Conservancy.</ref> It has been documented as a prostrate structure. It is strongly paraheliotropic.<ref>[[KMR]] observation at Pebble Hill Plantation, Georgia in July.</ref>
  
''G. regularis'' is a prostrate perennial with showy violet-purple flowers, frequently found climbing over bushes (Graham 1941). Stems have been observed to twine on low shrubs (FSU Herbarium). It has been documented as a prostrate structure (FSU Herbarium). It is strongly paraheliotropic,<ref>[[KMR]] observation at Pebble Hill Plantation, Georgia in July.</ref>
+
Generally, the genus ''Galactia'' are "trailing or twining, climbing, perennial, herbaceous or woody vines or erect, perennial herbs or rarely shrubs. Leaves 1-pinnate, usually 3-foliolate (or rarely 1-,5-7-,9-folilolate); leaflets entire, petiolulate, stipellate. Racemes axillary, pedunculate with few to numerous, papilionaceous flowers borne solitary or 2-several at a node, each subtended by a bract and fusion of the 2 uppermost, with the laterals usually shorter than the uppermost and lowermost; petals usually red, purple, pink or white; stamens diadelphous or elsewhere occasionally monadelphous; ovary sessile or shortly stipitate. Legume oblong-linear to linear, few-many seeded, compressed, straight or slightly curbed, dehiscent with often laterally twisting valves."<ref name=radford>Radford, Albert E., Harry E. Ahles, and C. Ritchie Bell. Manual of the Vascular Flora of the Carolinas. 1964, 1968. The University of North Carolina Press. 643-4. Print.</ref>
 +
 
 +
Specifically, for this species, ''G. regularis'', they are "trailing, perennial herb with minutely appressed-pubescent to glabrate stems, 0.4-1.2 m long. Leaves 3-foliolate, rachis 3-18 mm long; leaflets oblong to elliptic or oblong-lanceolate, (1.2) 2-3.5 (5) cm long, glabrous, or nearly so, above and glabrous to appressed-pubescent beneath. Racemes with glabrous to appressed short-pubescent peduncles and rachises (1) 3-13 cm long; flowers few to many, each on a puberulent pedicel 1-5 mm long subtended by ovate to triangular-subulate bracts ca. 1 mm long; bractlets triangular to linear-subulate, 0.8-1.5 (3) mm long. Calyx glabrous or sparsely appressed-pubescent, tube 2-3.5 mm long, lobes 3-6 mm long; petals reddish purple, the standard 1.2-1.8 cm long. Legume densely appressed-pubescent, 2-5 cm long."<ref name=radford/>
  
 
==Distribution==
 
==Distribution==
It occurs in pinelands and sandy woods from New York to Florida and Mississippi (Graham 1941). Occurs in Pinus elliottii plantation in South Carolina (Mou et. al 2005).
+
''Galactia regularis'' is natively distributed from southeast Pennsylvania west to Missouri and Oklahoma, and south to southern Florida and southeastern Texas.<ref name=weakley/>  It occurs in pinelands and sandy woods from New York to Florida and Mississippi.<ref name=graham/> Occurs in a ''Pinus elliottii'' plantation in South Carolina.<ref name=mou>Mou, P., R. H. Jones, et al. (2005). "Regeneration strategies, disturbance and plant interactions as organizers of vegetation spatial patterns in a pine forest." Landscape Ecology 20: 971-987.</ref>
  
 
==Ecology==
 
==Ecology==
 
===Habitat=== <!--Natural communities, human disturbed habitats, topography, hydrology, soils, light, fire regime requirements for removal of competition, etc.-->
 
===Habitat=== <!--Natural communities, human disturbed habitats, topography, hydrology, soils, light, fire regime requirements for removal of competition, etc.-->
''Galactia regularis'' has been documented in open sand ridges, open cedar glades, dry prairies, dry upland woods, along rocky banks, scrub oak-wiregrass ridges, shell ridge in a brackish marsh, dry grassy scrub border of a cypress swamp, open oak-hickory woods of a bog boarder, and mature longleaf pine-wiregrass stand that is frequently burned (FSU Herbarium).
+
Generally, ''G. regularis'' can be found in woodlands and dry forests.<ref name=weakley/> ''Galactia regularis'' has been documented in open sand ridges, open cedar glades, dry prairies, dry upland woods, along rocky banks, scrub oak-wiregrass ridges, shell ridge in a brackish marsh, dry grassy scrub border of a cypress swamp, open oak-hickory woods of a bog boarder, pine flatwoods at the edges of pond cypress wetland, edge of a floodplain woodland on a natural levee, and mature longleaf pine-wiregrass stand that is frequently burned.<ref name=fsu/> It can be found in xeric areas with hot, wet summers and mild, dry winters.<ref name=hawkes>Hawkes, C. V. and E. S. Menges (2003). "Effects of lichens on seedling emergence in a xeric Florida shrubland." Southeastern Naturalist 2: 223-234.</ref> ''G. regularis'' has been documented in pine sandhill communities.<ref name=downer>Downer, M. R. (2012). Plant species richness and species area relationships in a Florida sandhill community. Integrative Biology. Ann Arbor, MI, University of South Florida. M.S.: 52.</ref> It has also been observed in shrublands.<ref name=hawkes/> In disturbed habitats ''G. regularis'' has been found growing in areas of clay with sandstone that have been recently cleared and bulldozed along with developed locations. Soils range from sand to sandy loam.<ref name=fsu/> At the Archbold Biological Station in central Florida, ''G. regularis'' was found to be associated with patches of rosemary scrub.<ref>Quintana-Ascencio, P. F. and E. S. Menges (1996). "Inferring Metapopulation Dynamics from Patch-Level Incidence of Florida of Scrub Plants." Conservation Biology 10(4): 1210-1219.</ref> This species is also considered an indicator species of the Florida peninsula xeric sandhills habitat.<ref>Carr, S. C., et al. (2010). "A Vegetation Classification of Fire-Dependent Pinelands of Florida." Castanea 75(2): 153-189.</ref> It preferentially grows in gaps that are created by fire disturbance.<ref> Young, C. C. and E. S. Menges. (1999). "Postfire gap-phase regeneration in scrubby flatwoods on the Lake Wales Ridge." Florida Scientist 62(1): 1-12.</ref>
It can be found in xeric areas with hot, wet summers and mild, dry winters (Hawkes and Menges 2003) Pine sandhill communities (Downer 2012).
+
''G. regularis'' was found to increase its occurrence and abundance in response to soil disturbance by clearcutting and chopping in South Carolina. It has shown regrowth in reestablished native habitat that was disturbed by these practices.<ref>Cushwa, C.T. and M.B. Jones. (1969). Wildlife Food Plants on Chopped Areas in Piedmont South Carolina. Note SE-119. Asheville, NC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. 4 pp.</ref> However, it does not respond to soil disturbance by clearcutting and chopping in north Florida flatwoods forests.<ref>Moore, W.H., B.F. Swindel, and W.S. Terry. (1982). Vegetative Response to Clearcutting and Chopping in a North Florida Flatwoods Forest. Journal of Range Management 35(2):214-218.</ref> ''G. regularis'' was found to be neutral in its short-term response to single mechanical soil disturbances but was a decreaser in its long-term response following cessation of repeated soil disturbance.<ref name=Dixon>Dixon, C. M., K. M. Robertson, A. M. Reid and M. T. Rother. 2024. Mechanical soil disturbance in a pine savanna has multiyear effects on plant species composition. Ecosphere 15(2):e4759.</ref>
It can be found in shrubland (Hawkes and Menges 2003).
 
 
 
At Heart Island Conservation area it has been recorded in pine flatwoods and at the edges of pond cypress wetlands (FSU Herbarium). Along the Apalachicola River East of Sneads, ''G. regularis'' was observed growing in an edge of a floodplain woodland on a natural levee (FSU Herbarium).  
 
  
In areas of human impact, ''G. regularis'' has been found growing entwined with ''Galactia volubilis'' and ''Rhynchosia difformis''(FSU Herbarium). Recorded populations have been found at Miami Biscayne Dog Track and an area of clay with sandstone that had been recently cleared and bulldozed (FSU Herbarium).
+
Species that have been associated with ''G. regularis'' are ''Elephantopus'', ''Yucca'', bahia grass, centipede grass, ''Galactia volubilis'' and ''Rhynchosia difformis.''<ref name=fsu/>
  
Soils range from sand to sandy loam.  
+
''Galactia regularis''is an indicator species for the Peninsula Xeric Sandhills community type as described in Carr et al. (2010).<ref>Carr, S.C., K.M. Robertson, and R.K. Peet. 2010. A vegetation classification of fire-dependent pinelands of Florida. Castanea 75:153-189.</ref>
  
Species of ''Elephantopus'', ''Yucca'', bahia grass, centipede grass, ''Galactia volubilis'' and ''Rhynchosia difformis'' have been associated with ''G. regularis'' (FSU Herbarium). 
 
 
===Phenology=== <!--Timing off flowering, fruiting, seed dispersal, and environmental triggers.  Cite PanFlora website if appropriate: http://www.gilnelson.com/PanFlora/ -->
 
===Phenology=== <!--Timing off flowering, fruiting, seed dispersal, and environmental triggers.  Cite PanFlora website if appropriate: http://www.gilnelson.com/PanFlora/ -->
 +
This species generally flowers from July to September, and fruits from August to October.<ref name=weakley/>  ''G. regularis'' has been observed to flower from April through November.<ref>Nelson, G.  [http://www.gilnelson.com/ PanFlora]: Plant data for the eastern United States with emphasis on the Southeastern Coastal Plains, Florida, and the Florida Panhandle. www.gilnelson.com/PanFlora/  Accessed: 9 DEC 2016</ref><ref name=fsu/>
  
Flowers June through November (FSU Herbarium).
+
===Seed dispersal===
 +
This species is thought to be dispersed by gravity. <ref> Kirkman, L. Katherine. Unpublished database of seed dispersal mode of plants found in Coastal Plain longleaf pine-grasslands of the Jones Ecological Research Center, Georgia.</ref>
  
===Seed dispersal===
 
 
===Seed bank and germination===
 
===Seed bank and germination===
Maximum germination was observed for G. regularis at the 80 degrees Celsius dry heat shock treatment. Wet heat (boiling water) treatments, however, resulted in 100% mortality of seeds (Bolin 2009).
+
Maximum germination was observed for ''G. regularis'' at the 80 degrees Celsius dry heat shock treatment. Wet heat (boiling water) treatments, however, resulted in 100% mortality of seeds.<ref name=bolin>Bolin, J. F. (2009). "Heat shock germination responses of three eastern North American temperate species." Castanea 74: 160-167.</ref>
Soil scarification seems to impede germination (Mou et. al 2005). It reproduces by resprouting after fire (Reinhart and Menges 2004).
+
Soil scarification seems to impede germination.<ref name=mou/> It readily resprouts and germinates from seed after fire.<ref name=reinhart>Reinhart, K. O. and E. S. Menges (2004). "Effects of re-introducing fire to a central Florida sandhill community." Applied Vegetation Science 7: 141-150.</ref><ref>Freeman, J. E. and L. N. Kobziar (2011). "Tracking postfire successional trajectories in a plant community adapted to high-severity fire." Ecological Applications 21: 61-74.</ref>
  
 
===Fire ecology=== <!--Fire tolerance, fire dependence, adaptive fire responses-->
 
===Fire ecology=== <!--Fire tolerance, fire dependence, adaptive fire responses-->
In a field study of vegetation change in Florida scrub, G. regularis cover increased after fire (Weekley and Menges 2003). However, this increase may not be the direct result of fire. Heat shock germination may play a role in its post-fire recruitment (Bolin 2009). The amount of G. regularis decreased after a spring burn; decreased slightly after a summer burn; and increased in the control plots (Cushwa et. al 1970).
+
In a field study of vegetation change in the Florida scrub, ''G. regularis'' increased in abundance post fire.<ref name=weekley>Weekley, C.W. and E.S. Menges. 2003. Species and vegetation responses to prescribed fire in a long-unburned, endemic-rich Lake Wales ridge scrub. J. Torrey Bot. Soc. 130: 265-282. Bolin, J. F. (2009). "Heat shock germination responses of three eastern North American temperate species." Castanea 74: 160-167.</ref> However, this increase may not be the direct result of fire. Heat shock germination may play a role in its post-fire recruitment.<ref name=bolin>Bolin, J. F. (2009). "Heat shock germination responses of three eastern North American temperate species." Castanea 74: 160-167</ref> The amount of ''G. regularis'' decreased after a spring burn; decreased slightly after a summer burn; and increased in the control plots.<ref name=cushwa>Cushwa, C. T., M. Hopkins, et al. (1970). Response of legumes to prescribed burns in loblolly pine stands of the South Carolina Piedmont. Asheville, NC, USDA Forest Service, Research Note SE-140: 6.</ref> A total of 24 plants in four new quadrants were recruited postburn study in the Florida scrub – Lake Wales Ridge area.<ref name=weekley/> In previous studies conducted by Cushwa and his collegues determined that leguminous plants and their seeds respond best to hot, or high temperature, fires. Cuswha and his team also conducted laboratory tests indicating that the legume species will germinate the best when hit by moist heat, such as a prescribed fire being conducted on a day that is 80 degrees Fahrenheit.<ref name=cushwa/> As an herbaceous vine, the amount of groundcover of ''G. regularis'' increased slightly when the area has not been burned (controlled treatment). The amount of ground cover decreased from ~58 to 23% after a burn.<ref name=reinhart/> As well, a study by Dee and Menges found ''G. regularis'' to be positively associated with statistical significance growing in areas between 2 years and 8 years after a fire disturbance.<ref>Dee, J. R. and E. S. Menges (2014). "Gap ecology in the Florida scrubby flatwoods: effects of time-since-fire, gap area, gap aggregation and microhabitat on gap species diversity." Journal of Vegetation Science 25(5): 1235-1246.</ref>
A total of 24 plants in four new quadrants were recruited postburn study in the Florida scrub – Lake Wales Ridge area (Weekley and Menges 2003).
+
 
 +
Populations of ''Galactia regularis'' have been known to persist through repeated annual burning on the Pebble Hill plantation in north Florida.<ref>Robertson, K.M. Unpublished data collected from Pebble Hill Fire Plots, Pebble Hill Plantation, Thomasville, Georgia.</ref>
  
“Results from previous studies (Cushwa et. al 1969) indicate that leguminous plants and seed respond best to “hot” f i r e s - - i . e., those in which a high proportion of the ground fuel is consumed. Laboratory tests (Cushwa et. al 1968) have also shown that seed from several leguminous species germinate best after scarification with moist heat at temperatures near 80” C., a situation requiring a hot fire. The response of the leguminous plants and seed in this study, therefore, would probably have been greater if the pine stands had been burned with more intense fires. Nevertheless, further work will be necessary before we can make final conclusions about the value of prescribed burning to quail and other wildlife in the 2.5 million acres of pine in the South Carolina Piedmont (Cushwa et. al 1970).
 
As an herbaceous vine, the amount of groundcover of G. regularis increased slightly when the area has not been burned (controlled treatment). The amount of groundcover decreased from ~58 to 23% after a burn. (Michelle’s understanding that the G. regularis had a higher population when the area was burned previously before the experiments were conducted)(Reinhart and Menges 2004).
 
 
===Pollination===
 
===Pollination===
The following Hymenoptera families and species were observed visiting flowers of ''Galactia regularis'' at Archbold Biological Station (Deyrup 2015):
+
''Galactia regularis'' has been observed at the Archbold Biological Station to host thread-waisted wasps such as ''Trypargilum clavatum johannis'' (family Sphecidae), wasps such as ''Stenodynerus fundatiformis'' (family Vespidae), leafcutting bees from the family Megachilidae such as ''Anthidiellum notatum rufomaculatum, A. perplexum, Anthidium maculifrons, Coelioxys germana, C. sayi, Megachile albitarsis, M. brevis pseudobrevis, M. brimleyi, M. deflexa, M. exilis parexilis, M. georgica, M. integra, M. mendica,'' and ''M. petulans'', bees from the family Apidae such as ''Apis mellifera, Bombus impatiens,'' and ''Svastra atripes'', and sweat bees from the family Halictidae such as ''Augochlorella aurata, Augochloropsis metallica, A. sumptuosa,'' and ''Nomia maneei''.<ref name="Deyrup 2015">Deyrup, M.A. and N.D. 2015. Database of observations of Hymenoptera visitations to flowers of plants on Archbold Biological Station, Florida, USA.</ref> On occasion, this species occurred in White-tailed deer’s diet.<ref name=gee>Gee, K. L., M. D. Porter, et al. (1994). White-tailed deer : their foods and management in the cross timbers. Ardmore, OK, Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation.</ref>
  
Apidae:  ''Apis mellifera, Bombus impatiens, Svastra atripes''
+
===Herbivory and toxicology===
 +
Seeds of ''G. regularis'' have been found in stomachs of the bobwhite and has been considered an important food.<ref name=graham/> At an Arkansas experiment station, this species is an important component of loblolly pine plantations for the diet of bobwhite quail in 0-year and 2-year stands.<ref>Sweeney, J. M., et al. (1981). Bobwhite quail food in young Arkansas loblolly pine plantations. Arkansas Experiment Station bulletin 852. Fayetteville, AR, University of Arkansas, Divisionn of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Station.</ref>
  
Halictidae: ''Augochlorella aurata, Augochloropsis metallica, A. sumptuosa, Nomia maneei''
+
===Diseases and parasites===
 +
''G. regularis'' reposnded moderately resistant to a root-knotnematodes study. A nematode, ''M. incognita'', showed an immune response to the root galls and egg masses in the 2004 study but only a highly resistant response in 2001.<ref name=queensberry>Quesenberry, K. H., J. M. Dampier, et al. (2008). "Response of native southeastern U.S. legumes to root-knot nematodes." Crop Science 48: 2274-2278.</ref>
  
Megachilidae:  ''Anthidiellum notatum rufomaculatum, A. perplexum, Anthidium maculifrons, Coelioxys germana, C. sayi, Megachile albitarsis, M. brevis pseudobrevis, M. brimleyi, M. deflexa, M. exilis parexilis, M. georgica, M. integra, M. mendica, M. petulans''
+
==Conservation, cultivation, and restoration==
 +
This species is listed as extirpated by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.<ref>USDA, NRCS. (2016). The PLANTS Database (http://plants.usda.gov, 13 May 2019). National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC 27401-4901 USA.</ref>
  
Sphecidae:  ''Trypargilum clavatum johannis''
+
==Cultural use==
 +
==Photo Gallery==
 +
<gallery widths=180px>
  
Vespidae: ''Stenodynerus fundatiformis''
+
File:Galactia regularis PH 2015-10.JPG| <center> ''Galactia regularis'' <p> Photo by Kevin Robertson </p>
  
===Use by animals=== <!--Herbivory, granivory, insect hosting, etc.-->
+
</nowiki></gallery>
On occasion, occurred in White-tailed deer’s diet (Gee et. al 1994).
 
Seeds of ''G. regularis'' have been found in stomachs of the bobwhite and has been considered an important food (Graham 1941).
 
===Diseases and parasites===
 
G. regularis reposnded moderately resistant to a root-knotnematodes study.  A nematode, M. incognita, showed an immune response to the root galls and egg masses in the 2004 study but only a highly resistant response in 2001 (Quesenberry et. al 2008).
 
  
==Conservation and Management==
 
==Cultivation and restoration==
 
==Photo Gallery==
 
 
==References and notes==
 
==References and notes==
Bolin, J. F. (2009). "Heat shock germination responses of three eastern North American temperate species." Castanea 74: 160-167.
 
 
Deyrup, M.A. and N.D. 2015. Database of observations of Hymenoptera visitations to flowers of plants on Archbold Biological Station, Florida, USA.
 
 
Downer, M. R. (2012). Plant species richness and species area relationships in a Florida sandhill community. Integrative Biology. Ann Arbor, MI, University of South Florida. M.S.: 52.
 
 
Cushwa, C. T., M. Hopkins, et al. (1970). Response of legumes to prescribed burns in loblolly pine stands of the South Carolina Piedmont. Asheville, NC, USDA Forest Service, Research Note SE-140: 6.
 
 
Cushwa, C. T., Czuhai, Eugene, Cooper, R. W., and Julian, W. H.
 
1969. Burning clearcut openings in Ioblolly pine to improve wildlife habitat. Ga. Forest Res. Count. Res. Pap. 61, 5 pp. Cushwa, C. T. and Redd, J. B. 1966. One prescribed burn and its effects on habitat of the Powhatan Game Management Area. Southeast. Forest Exp. %a., U. S. Forest Serv. Res. Note SE-61, 2 pp.
 
 
Cushwa, C. T., Martin, R. E., and Miller, R. L. 1968. The effects of fire on seed germination. J. Range Manage. 21: 250-254. M a r t i n , R . E., a n d C u s h w a , C . T. 1966. Effects of heat and moisture on leguminous seed. Fifth Annu. Tall Timbers Fire Ecol. Conf. Proc. 1966: 159-175
 
 
Florida State University Robert K. Godfrey Herbarium database. URL: [http://herbarium.bio.fsu.edu http://herbarium.bio.fsu.edu]. Last accessed: July 2015  Collectors: Loran C. Anderson, H. E. Ahles, Tom Barnes, Michael B. Brooks, Robert W. Simons, Dianna Hall, R. Kral, R. K. Godfrey, Sidney McDaniel, R. A. Norris, H. R. Reed, Cecil R. Slaughter, Frankie Snow, A. E. Redford, C. Simon, A. A. Eaton, Robert L. Lazor, Bruce Hansen, JoAnn Hansen, W. A. Silveus, A. F. Clewell, Robert Blaisdell, O. Lakela, George R. Cooley, Richard J. Eaton, Daniel B. Ward, Paul O. Schallert, A. H. Curtiss    States and Counties: Florida: Bay, Brevard, Clay, Dixie, Duval, Escambia, Franklin, Flagler, Gadsden, Hillsborough, Jackson, Jefferson, Leon, Levy, Liberty, Madison, Nassau, Osceola, Putnam, Sarasota, St. Johns, Taylor, Wakulla, Washington. Georgia: Camden, Coffee, Grady. Mississippi: Pearl River, Oktibbeha. North Carolina: Alexander. South Carolina: Hampton. Virginia: Pulaski.  Compiled by Tall Timbers Research Station and Land Conservancy.
 
 
Gee, K. L., M. D. Porter, et al. (1994). White-tailed deer : their foods and management in the cross timbers. Ardmore, OK, Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation.
 
 
Graham, E. H. (1941). Legumes for erosion control and wildlife. Washington, USDA
 
 
Hawkes, C. V. and E. S. Menges (2003). "Effects of lichens on seedling emergence in a xeric Florida shrubland." Southeastern Naturalist 2: 223-234.
 
 
Mou, P., R. H. Jones, et al. (2005). "Regeneration strategies, disturbance and plant interactions as organizers of vegetation spatial patterns in a pine forest." Landscape Ecology 20: 971-987.
 
 
Quesenberry, K. H., J. M. Dampier, et al. (2008). "Response of native southeastern U.S. legumes to root-knot nematodes." Crop Science 48: 2274-2278.
 
 
Reinhart, K. O. and E. S. Menges (2004). "Effects of re-introducing fire to a central Florida sandhill community." Applied Vegetation Science 7: 141-150.
 
 
Weekley, C.W. and E.S. Menges. 2003. Species and vegetation responses to prescribed fire in a long-unburned, endemic-rich Lake Wales ridge scrub. J. Torrey Bot. Soc. 130: 265-282. Bolin, J. F. (2009). "Heat shock germination responses of three eastern North American temperate species." Castanea 74: 160-167.
 

Latest revision as of 07:52, 2 August 2024

Galactia regularis
Galactia regularis Gil.jpg
Photo was taken by Gil Nelson
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants
Class: Magnoliopsida – Dicotyledons
Order: Fabales
Family: Fabaceae ⁄ Leguminosae
Genus: Galactia
Species: G. regularis
Binomial name
Galactia regularis
(L.) Britton, Sterns & Poggenb.
GALA REGU dist.jpg
Natural range of Galactia regularis from USDA NRCS Plants Database.

Common name: eastern milkpea

Taxonomic notes

Synonyms: Galactia volubilis (Linnaeus) Britton[1]

Varieties: G. macreei M.A. Curtis[1]

Description

G. regularis is a prostrate perennial with showy violet-purple flowers, frequently found climbing over bushes.[2] Stems have been observed to twine on low shrubs.[3] It has been documented as a prostrate structure. It is strongly paraheliotropic.[4]

Generally, the genus Galactia are "trailing or twining, climbing, perennial, herbaceous or woody vines or erect, perennial herbs or rarely shrubs. Leaves 1-pinnate, usually 3-foliolate (or rarely 1-,5-7-,9-folilolate); leaflets entire, petiolulate, stipellate. Racemes axillary, pedunculate with few to numerous, papilionaceous flowers borne solitary or 2-several at a node, each subtended by a bract and fusion of the 2 uppermost, with the laterals usually shorter than the uppermost and lowermost; petals usually red, purple, pink or white; stamens diadelphous or elsewhere occasionally monadelphous; ovary sessile or shortly stipitate. Legume oblong-linear to linear, few-many seeded, compressed, straight or slightly curbed, dehiscent with often laterally twisting valves."[5]

Specifically, for this species, G. regularis, they are "trailing, perennial herb with minutely appressed-pubescent to glabrate stems, 0.4-1.2 m long. Leaves 3-foliolate, rachis 3-18 mm long; leaflets oblong to elliptic or oblong-lanceolate, (1.2) 2-3.5 (5) cm long, glabrous, or nearly so, above and glabrous to appressed-pubescent beneath. Racemes with glabrous to appressed short-pubescent peduncles and rachises (1) 3-13 cm long; flowers few to many, each on a puberulent pedicel 1-5 mm long subtended by ovate to triangular-subulate bracts ca. 1 mm long; bractlets triangular to linear-subulate, 0.8-1.5 (3) mm long. Calyx glabrous or sparsely appressed-pubescent, tube 2-3.5 mm long, lobes 3-6 mm long; petals reddish purple, the standard 1.2-1.8 cm long. Legume densely appressed-pubescent, 2-5 cm long."[5]

Distribution

Galactia regularis is natively distributed from southeast Pennsylvania west to Missouri and Oklahoma, and south to southern Florida and southeastern Texas.[1] It occurs in pinelands and sandy woods from New York to Florida and Mississippi.[2] Occurs in a Pinus elliottii plantation in South Carolina.[6]

Ecology

Habitat

Generally, G. regularis can be found in woodlands and dry forests.[1] Galactia regularis has been documented in open sand ridges, open cedar glades, dry prairies, dry upland woods, along rocky banks, scrub oak-wiregrass ridges, shell ridge in a brackish marsh, dry grassy scrub border of a cypress swamp, open oak-hickory woods of a bog boarder, pine flatwoods at the edges of pond cypress wetland, edge of a floodplain woodland on a natural levee, and mature longleaf pine-wiregrass stand that is frequently burned.[3] It can be found in xeric areas with hot, wet summers and mild, dry winters.[7] G. regularis has been documented in pine sandhill communities.[8] It has also been observed in shrublands.[7] In disturbed habitats G. regularis has been found growing in areas of clay with sandstone that have been recently cleared and bulldozed along with developed locations. Soils range from sand to sandy loam.[3] At the Archbold Biological Station in central Florida, G. regularis was found to be associated with patches of rosemary scrub.[9] This species is also considered an indicator species of the Florida peninsula xeric sandhills habitat.[10] It preferentially grows in gaps that are created by fire disturbance.[11] G. regularis was found to increase its occurrence and abundance in response to soil disturbance by clearcutting and chopping in South Carolina. It has shown regrowth in reestablished native habitat that was disturbed by these practices.[12] However, it does not respond to soil disturbance by clearcutting and chopping in north Florida flatwoods forests.[13] G. regularis was found to be neutral in its short-term response to single mechanical soil disturbances but was a decreaser in its long-term response following cessation of repeated soil disturbance.[14]

Species that have been associated with G. regularis are Elephantopus, Yucca, bahia grass, centipede grass, Galactia volubilis and Rhynchosia difformis.[3]

Galactia regularisis an indicator species for the Peninsula Xeric Sandhills community type as described in Carr et al. (2010).[15]

Phenology

This species generally flowers from July to September, and fruits from August to October.[1] G. regularis has been observed to flower from April through November.[16][3]

Seed dispersal

This species is thought to be dispersed by gravity. [17]

Seed bank and germination

Maximum germination was observed for G. regularis at the 80 degrees Celsius dry heat shock treatment. Wet heat (boiling water) treatments, however, resulted in 100% mortality of seeds.[18] Soil scarification seems to impede germination.[6] It readily resprouts and germinates from seed after fire.[19][20]

Fire ecology

In a field study of vegetation change in the Florida scrub, G. regularis increased in abundance post fire.[21] However, this increase may not be the direct result of fire. Heat shock germination may play a role in its post-fire recruitment.[18] The amount of G. regularis decreased after a spring burn; decreased slightly after a summer burn; and increased in the control plots.[22] A total of 24 plants in four new quadrants were recruited postburn study in the Florida scrub – Lake Wales Ridge area.[21] In previous studies conducted by Cushwa and his collegues determined that leguminous plants and their seeds respond best to hot, or high temperature, fires. Cuswha and his team also conducted laboratory tests indicating that the legume species will germinate the best when hit by moist heat, such as a prescribed fire being conducted on a day that is 80 degrees Fahrenheit.[22] As an herbaceous vine, the amount of groundcover of G. regularis increased slightly when the area has not been burned (controlled treatment). The amount of ground cover decreased from ~58 to 23% after a burn.[19] As well, a study by Dee and Menges found G. regularis to be positively associated with statistical significance growing in areas between 2 years and 8 years after a fire disturbance.[23]

Populations of Galactia regularis have been known to persist through repeated annual burning on the Pebble Hill plantation in north Florida.[24]

Pollination

Galactia regularis has been observed at the Archbold Biological Station to host thread-waisted wasps such as Trypargilum clavatum johannis (family Sphecidae), wasps such as Stenodynerus fundatiformis (family Vespidae), leafcutting bees from the family Megachilidae such as Anthidiellum notatum rufomaculatum, A. perplexum, Anthidium maculifrons, Coelioxys germana, C. sayi, Megachile albitarsis, M. brevis pseudobrevis, M. brimleyi, M. deflexa, M. exilis parexilis, M. georgica, M. integra, M. mendica, and M. petulans, bees from the family Apidae such as Apis mellifera, Bombus impatiens, and Svastra atripes, and sweat bees from the family Halictidae such as Augochlorella aurata, Augochloropsis metallica, A. sumptuosa, and Nomia maneei.[25] On occasion, this species occurred in White-tailed deer’s diet.[26]

Herbivory and toxicology

Seeds of G. regularis have been found in stomachs of the bobwhite and has been considered an important food.[2] At an Arkansas experiment station, this species is an important component of loblolly pine plantations for the diet of bobwhite quail in 0-year and 2-year stands.[27]

Diseases and parasites

G. regularis reposnded moderately resistant to a root-knotnematodes study. A nematode, M. incognita, showed an immune response to the root galls and egg masses in the 2004 study but only a highly resistant response in 2001.[28]

Conservation, cultivation, and restoration

This species is listed as extirpated by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.[29]

Cultural use

Photo Gallery

References and notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Weakley, A.S. 2020. Flora of the Southeastern United States. Edition of 20 October 2020. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Graham, E. H. (1941). Legumes for erosion control and wildlife. Washington, USDA
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Florida State University Robert K. Godfrey Herbarium database. URL: http://herbarium.bio.fsu.edu. Last accessed: July 2015. Collectors: Loran C. Anderson, H. E. Ahles, Tom Barnes, Michael B. Brooks, Robert W. Simons, Dianna Hall, R. Kral, R. K. Godfrey, Sidney McDaniel, R. A. Norris, H. R. Reed, Cecil R. Slaughter, Frankie Snow, A. E. Redford, C. Simon, A. A. Eaton, Robert L. Lazor, Bruce Hansen, JoAnn Hansen, W. A. Silveus, A. F. Clewell, Robert Blaisdell, O. Lakela, George R. Cooley, Richard J. Eaton, Daniel B. Ward, Paul O. Schallert, A. H. Curtiss. States and Counties: Florida: Bay, Brevard, Clay, Dixie, Duval, Escambia, Franklin, Flagler, Gadsden, Hillsborough, Jackson, Jefferson, Leon, Levy, Liberty, Madison, Nassau, Osceola, Putnam, Sarasota, St. Johns, Taylor, Wakulla, Washington. Georgia: Camden, Coffee, Grady. Mississippi: Pearl River, Oktibbeha. North Carolina: Alexander. South Carolina: Hampton. Virginia: Pulaski. Compiled by Tall Timbers Research Station and Land Conservancy.
  4. KMR observation at Pebble Hill Plantation, Georgia in July.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Radford, Albert E., Harry E. Ahles, and C. Ritchie Bell. Manual of the Vascular Flora of the Carolinas. 1964, 1968. The University of North Carolina Press. 643-4. Print.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Mou, P., R. H. Jones, et al. (2005). "Regeneration strategies, disturbance and plant interactions as organizers of vegetation spatial patterns in a pine forest." Landscape Ecology 20: 971-987.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Hawkes, C. V. and E. S. Menges (2003). "Effects of lichens on seedling emergence in a xeric Florida shrubland." Southeastern Naturalist 2: 223-234.
  8. Downer, M. R. (2012). Plant species richness and species area relationships in a Florida sandhill community. Integrative Biology. Ann Arbor, MI, University of South Florida. M.S.: 52.
  9. Quintana-Ascencio, P. F. and E. S. Menges (1996). "Inferring Metapopulation Dynamics from Patch-Level Incidence of Florida of Scrub Plants." Conservation Biology 10(4): 1210-1219.
  10. Carr, S. C., et al. (2010). "A Vegetation Classification of Fire-Dependent Pinelands of Florida." Castanea 75(2): 153-189.
  11. Young, C. C. and E. S. Menges. (1999). "Postfire gap-phase regeneration in scrubby flatwoods on the Lake Wales Ridge." Florida Scientist 62(1): 1-12.
  12. Cushwa, C.T. and M.B. Jones. (1969). Wildlife Food Plants on Chopped Areas in Piedmont South Carolina. Note SE-119. Asheville, NC: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. 4 pp.
  13. Moore, W.H., B.F. Swindel, and W.S. Terry. (1982). Vegetative Response to Clearcutting and Chopping in a North Florida Flatwoods Forest. Journal of Range Management 35(2):214-218.
  14. Dixon, C. M., K. M. Robertson, A. M. Reid and M. T. Rother. 2024. Mechanical soil disturbance in a pine savanna has multiyear effects on plant species composition. Ecosphere 15(2):e4759.
  15. Carr, S.C., K.M. Robertson, and R.K. Peet. 2010. A vegetation classification of fire-dependent pinelands of Florida. Castanea 75:153-189.
  16. Nelson, G. PanFlora: Plant data for the eastern United States with emphasis on the Southeastern Coastal Plains, Florida, and the Florida Panhandle. www.gilnelson.com/PanFlora/ Accessed: 9 DEC 2016
  17. Kirkman, L. Katherine. Unpublished database of seed dispersal mode of plants found in Coastal Plain longleaf pine-grasslands of the Jones Ecological Research Center, Georgia.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Bolin, J. F. (2009). "Heat shock germination responses of three eastern North American temperate species." Castanea 74: 160-167. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "bolin" defined multiple times with different content
  19. 19.0 19.1 Reinhart, K. O. and E. S. Menges (2004). "Effects of re-introducing fire to a central Florida sandhill community." Applied Vegetation Science 7: 141-150.
  20. Freeman, J. E. and L. N. Kobziar (2011). "Tracking postfire successional trajectories in a plant community adapted to high-severity fire." Ecological Applications 21: 61-74.
  21. 21.0 21.1 Weekley, C.W. and E.S. Menges. 2003. Species and vegetation responses to prescribed fire in a long-unburned, endemic-rich Lake Wales ridge scrub. J. Torrey Bot. Soc. 130: 265-282. Bolin, J. F. (2009). "Heat shock germination responses of three eastern North American temperate species." Castanea 74: 160-167.
  22. 22.0 22.1 Cushwa, C. T., M. Hopkins, et al. (1970). Response of legumes to prescribed burns in loblolly pine stands of the South Carolina Piedmont. Asheville, NC, USDA Forest Service, Research Note SE-140: 6.
  23. Dee, J. R. and E. S. Menges (2014). "Gap ecology in the Florida scrubby flatwoods: effects of time-since-fire, gap area, gap aggregation and microhabitat on gap species diversity." Journal of Vegetation Science 25(5): 1235-1246.
  24. Robertson, K.M. Unpublished data collected from Pebble Hill Fire Plots, Pebble Hill Plantation, Thomasville, Georgia.
  25. Deyrup, M.A. and N.D. 2015. Database of observations of Hymenoptera visitations to flowers of plants on Archbold Biological Station, Florida, USA.
  26. Gee, K. L., M. D. Porter, et al. (1994). White-tailed deer : their foods and management in the cross timbers. Ardmore, OK, Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation.
  27. Sweeney, J. M., et al. (1981). Bobwhite quail food in young Arkansas loblolly pine plantations. Arkansas Experiment Station bulletin 852. Fayetteville, AR, University of Arkansas, Divisionn of Agriculture, Agricultural Experiment Station.
  28. Quesenberry, K. H., J. M. Dampier, et al. (2008). "Response of native southeastern U.S. legumes to root-knot nematodes." Crop Science 48: 2274-2278.
  29. USDA, NRCS. (2016). The PLANTS Database (http://plants.usda.gov, 13 May 2019). National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC 27401-4901 USA.