Curve-pod Milk-vetch
Astragalus speirocarpus
Curvepod milk-vetch is a tufted, numerous branched, prostrate perennial with spreading to ascending stems from 10-40 cm long. Its herbage is gray, with numerous short microscopic hairs that are sharp, stiff and appressed to the stems and leaves. The pinnately compound leaves are 3 to 6 cm in length, with 9 to 17 leaflets which are oblong and rounded to obovate with blunt or notched tips.
The flower stems are shorter than or about equal to the upper leaves. The spreading or ascending flowers are found in loose to closely flowered racemes of ten to forty flowers. The flowers are white to lavender in color, often with a bluish tinge (especially the keel). Individual flowers are 14 to 20 mm in length. The wings are two to four mm longer than the keel.
The tubular calyx is grayish, hairy, and 6 to 9 mm in length. The calyx teeth have short, triangular teeth less than one-fourth the length of the tube.
The distinctive seed pods are pendulous, with strongly compressed bodies, and usually coiled 1.5 to 2.5 turns. The surface of the pods is marked with reddish specks and bears a fair amount of appressed, stiff hairs.
The flower stems are shorter than or about equal to the upper leaves. The spreading or ascending flowers are found in loose to closely flowered racemes of ten to forty flowers. The flowers are white to lavender in color, often with a bluish tinge (especially the keel). Individual flowers are 14 to 20 mm in length. The wings are two to four mm longer than the keel.
The tubular calyx is grayish, hairy, and 6 to 9 mm in length. The calyx teeth have short, triangular teeth less than one-fourth the length of the tube.
The distinctive seed pods are pendulous, with strongly compressed bodies, and usually coiled 1.5 to 2.5 turns. The surface of the pods is marked with reddish specks and bears a fair amount of appressed, stiff hairs.