Host an Event Volunteer Join Tickets

Support the plant database you love!

Share

Plant Database

Search for native plants by scientific name, common name or family. If you are not sure what you are looking for, try the Combination Search or our Recommended Species lists.

Enter a Plant Name:
Or you can choose a plant family:

Astragalus breweri

Astragalus breweri A. Gray

Brewer's Milkvetch

Fabaceae (Pea family)

Synonym(s):

USDA Symbol: ASBR8

USDA Native Status: L48 (N)

"Slender but variable in stature, rather sparsely leafy, with 1-3 or sometimes several erect or diffusely ascending stems from a subfiliform taproot, thinly strigulose with straight, appressed or narrowly ascending, white and (toward the inflorescence) black or fuscous hairs up to 0.3-0.55 mm. long, the herbage green or sometimes cinereous in youth, the leaflets glabrous above; stems (1.5) 4-30 cm. long, simple, commonly purplish at base, stramineous in age." (bibref: 1814).

"Over a small part of its range in Lake and Mendocino Counties A. Breweri is sympatric with forms of A. Rattani. The two species, found in similar environments, are much alike in habit of growth and floral morphology. Flowering specimens of the Brewer milk-vetch may be distinguished by the few ovules, usually four or very rarely up to six as opposed to eight or more in A. Rattani; but the extremely distinct fruits form early in the season and provide the simplest means of identification. The remarkable fruits of the Brewer milk-vetch, which are disposed at the tip of the peduncles in a seemingly umbellate, stellately spreading or ascending cluster, are divided abruptly into two parts, an ovoid or oblong-ellipsoid body densely beset with silvery hairs, and an erect or slightly declined, long-subulate, almost spinelike beak of nearly equal length but much less densely pubescent. Comparison of the beak with that of A. Rattani shows the two to be of the same structure." (bibref: 1814).

 

From the Image Gallery

No images of this plant

Plant Characteristics

Duration: Annual
Habit: Herb
Leaf Arrangement: Alternate
Fruit Type: Legume
Size Notes: "Stems (1.5) 4-30 cm. long, simple." (bibref: 1814).
Leaf: "Stipules (1) 1.5-4.5 mm. long, ovate or ovate-acuminate, rarely lanceolate, membranous becoming papery and brownish, semi- or almost fully amplexicaul, glabrous or nearly so dorsally, the margins ciliate and often beset with a few minute processes; leaves (1.5) 2-6 (7.5) cm. long, shortly petioled, with 7-13 rather distant, narrowly oblong-oblanceolate to broadly obovate-cuneate, retuse or (in some leaves of a plant or throughout some plants) oblong-elliptic and obtuse, flat leaflets 3-10 (12) mm. long." (bibref: 1814).
Flower: "Peduncles erect or divaricately ascending, (2) 3-9 (11) cm. long, surpassing the leaf; racemes subcapitately 3-10-flowered, the flowers ascending and spreading, the axis not or scarcely elongating, less than 5 mm. long in fruit; bracts membranous, pallid, ovate or lanceolate, 0.6-2 mm. long; pedicels ascending, straight or a little arched outward, at anthesis 0.4-0.8 (1.1) mm., in fruit a trifle thickened and 0.7-1.4 mm. long; bracteoles 0 (rarely a rudimentary scale); calyx 3.8-5.1 mm. long, densely strigulose-pilosulous with black or fuscous often mixed with some (rarely all) white hairs, the subsymmetric disc 0.4-1 mm. deep, the campanulate tube 2.5-3.5 mm. long, 1.8-2.5 mm. in diameter, the subulate teeth 1-2 mm. long, the whole becoming papery, ruptured, marcescent; petals whitish with maculate keel, or the banner, and sometimes also the wings, veined and suffused with lilac; banner recurved through 35-45 degrees, rhombic-obovate or -elliptic, or broadly rhombic, usually deeply notched, 7.8-11.4 mm. long, (3.5) 4.2-6 mm. wide; wings 6.7-9.2 mm. long, the claws 2.3-3.7 mm., the oblong-oblanceolate, obliquely truncate-undulate or shallowly emarginate, nearly straight or gently incurved blades 4.8-7 mm. long, 1.8-2.8 mm. wide; keel (5) 5.4-7.8 mm. long, the claws (2) 2.3-3.6 mm., the half-obovate blades 3.3-4.9 (5.1) mm. long, 1.7-2.3 mm. wide, incurved through 90-95 degrees to the rounded apex; anthers 0.35-0.5 mm. long." (bibref: 1814).
Fruit: "Pods stellately ascending in subumbel- late heads, sessile on the low-convex receptacle, composed of an ovoid, ovoid- oblong, or fusiform, densely (sometimes rather loosely) silvery-strigulose body 5.5-10 mm. long, (2.5) 2.8-4 mm. in diameter, acuminately tapering or cuneately contracted upward into a straight, erect or slightly declined, elongately subulate, spinelike (but not vulnerant), glabrescent beak (3.5) 4-10 mm. long, the body obtusely triquetrous with rounded-convex ventro-lateral faces and deeply sulcate dorsal face, the thinly fleshy, green valves becoming stiffly papery, smooth or nearly so beneath the vesture, inflexed as a complete septum (0.9) 1.2-2.1 mm. wide, the septum produced upward at least into the base of the beak; dehiscence tardy, the pod falling entire but finally splitting through both sutures and the septum into two false carpels; ovules commonly 4, rarely 2, 3, or 6; seeds mahogany- or sooty-brown, elaborately pitted and wrinkled, 2.5-3.4 mm. long." (bibref: 1814).

Bloom Information

Bloom Color: White , Purple , Violet
Bloom Time: Mar , Apr , May , Jun
Bloom Notes: "Petals whitish with maculate keel, or the banner, and sometimes also the wings, veined and suffused with lilac." (bibref: 1814).

Distribution

USA: CA
Native Distribution: "Commonly on or near volcanic or serpentine outcrops, locally plentiful in propitious seasons in the interior valleys and foothills of the Coast Ranges in southeastern Mendocino, Lake, Napa, and Sonoma Counties, southwest to the Pacific slope of Mt. Tamalpais, Marin County, California." (bibref: 1814).
Native Habitat: "Grassy flats, meadows moist in spring, and open slopes in the chaparral belt below 2000 feet." (bibref: 1814).

Bibliography

Bibref 1814 - Atlas of North American Astragalus Volume 2 (1964) Barneby, Rupert C.

Search More Titles in Bibliography

Additional resources

USDA: Find Astragalus breweri in USDA Plants
FNA: Find Astragalus breweri in the Flora of North America (if available)
Google: Search Google for Astragalus breweri

Metadata

Record Modified: 2020-12-07
Research By: Joseph A. Marcus

Go back