Lespedeza virginica

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Common name: Slender lespedeza[1], Virginia lespedeza[2]

Lespedeza virginica
Lespedeza virginica IWF.jpg
Photo by the Illinois Wildflowers Database
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta - Flowering plants
Class: Magnoliopsida - Dicots
Order: Fabales
Family: Fabaceae
Genus: Lespedeza
Species: L. virginica
Binomial name
Lespedeza virginica
L.
LESP VIRG DIST.JPG
Natural range of Lespedeza virginica from USDA NRCS Plants Database.

Taxonomic Notes

Synonyms: none.[3]

Varieties: none.[3]

Description

L. virginica is a perennial forb/herb of the Fabaceae family native to North America and Canada.[1] It is an erect perennial that is 0.3-1 m tall. The stem is glabrate to moderately pubescent, mostly erect, can be ascending, and usually branched. Leavesare alternate, pinnately trifoliolate compound; leaflets 3, linear to narrowly oblong, without stipels. The leaflets are linear to narrowly oblong, 0.6-2.5 cm long, and 3-5 times long as wide. They are sparsely strigillose to glabrate above and densely strigillose beneath with narrowly linear stipules. Racemes are few-several flowered, axillary, and exceeded by leaves. Inflorescence peduncles and axes are densely strigillose with 0.5-1.2 mm long pedicels. Calyx is densely strigillose or puberulent with 1.2-2.4 mm long lobes. The petals are roseate to purplish and 5-7 mm long. l fruit is a 1-seeded, indehiscent pod. Legumes are broadly elliptic to ovate, 3-6 mm long, conspicuously reticulate, and sparsely strigillose.[4][5]

Distribution

L. virginica ranges from Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, west to Michigan, Wisconsin, and Iowa, the south to Panhandle Florida and Texas. It also grows in the Ontario region of Canada.[1][3]

Ecology

Habitat

L. virginica proliferates in sandhills, woodlands, and woodland borders.[2] Specimens have been collected from annually burned pineland, drying sandy loam of pine-oak woods, border of roadside and woodland, beech-magnolia forest, old field, old field with pine woods, open stand of shortleaf pine with snady clay, young slash pine plantation, disturbed regions such as roadsides and fields, and longleaf pine wiregrass ridge.[6] L. virginica responds positively or not at all to clearcutting and chopping in South Carolina.[7]

Phenology

L. virginica flowers from July to September and fruits from August to November.[3]

Seed dispersal

This species is thought to be dispersed by gravity.[8]

Fire ecology

L. virginica increases in abundance with increasing fire frequency.[9]

Conservation, cultivation, and restoration

L. virginica is listed as threatened by the New Hampshire Natural Heritage Inventory Division of Land and Forests and by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources Bureau of Endangered Resources.[1]

Cultural use

Photo Gallery

References and notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 USDA Plant Database https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=LEVI7
  2. 2.0 2.1 Weakley, A. S. (2015). Flora of the Southern and Mid-Atlantic States. Chapel Hill, NC, University of North Carolina Herbarium.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Weakley, A.S. 2015. Flora of the southern and mid-atlantic states. Working Draft of 21 May 2015. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
  4. Radford, A. E., Ahles, H. E., & Bell, C. R. (1968). Manual of the vascular flora of the Carolinas. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.
  5. Gee, K. L., et al. (1994). White-tailed deer: their foods and management in the cross timbers. Ardmore, OK, Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation.
  6. URL: http://herbarium.bio.fsu.edu. Last accessed: June 2018. Collectors: A.F. Clewell, Loran C. Anderson, Gary Knight, R. Kral, R.K. Godfrey, Richard S. Mitchell, R. Komarek, Norman E. Hill, Delzie Demaree, D.S. Correll. States and counties: Florida (Leon, jackson, washington, Holmes, Okaloosa, jefferson, Madison, Liberty) Goergia (Thomas, Grady, Haralson, Marion, Chattooga, Coweta, Talbot, Meriwether, Webster, Lee, Miller, Crisp, Appling, Wheeler, Wilcox, Dodge, Walker, Clarke, Long, De Kalb, Heard, Randolph, Clay, Decatur, Steart, Muscogee, Troup, Chattahoochee, Walker, Baker, Harris)
  7. 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.
  8. 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.
  9. Burton, J. A. (2009). Fire frequency effects on vegetation of an upland old growth forest in eastern Oklahoma. Environmental Science. Stillwater, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State University. Bachelor: 78.