Lemmon’s milkvetch – State Wildlife Action Plan

Lemmon’s milkvetch

Photo is needed for this SGCN.

Lemmon’s milkvetch is a perennial plant with numerous, widely branched and sparsely strigose prostrate stems that are loosely matted and 10-50 cm long. The leaves are 1-4.5 cm with 7-15 leaflets that are narrowly elliptic to oblanceolate, 2-11 by 1-2 mm, with obtuse to sub-acute tips. The leaf surface is abaxially strigillose and adaxially glabrate to glabrous. Leaf stipules are 2-5 mm and free. Inflorescences are subcapitate racemes with 2-13 flowers, peduncles 0.6-1.7 cm, bracts 0.8-2 mm, and pedicels 0.7-2.5 mm. Flowers are loosely ascending at anthesis with calyces 3-4 mm, strigillose and white sometimes with a few black hairs. The calyx tubes are 1.7-2.2 mm long with teeth subulate and 1.1-1.7 mm long. Corollas are whitish or tinged with lilac and 4.8-6.1 mm long, and banners are sometimes purple veined. Flowers have 4-8 ovules. Fruits are biocular and spreading or somewhat declined, elliptic or oblong-elliptic, compressed trigonous, straight, or somewhat incurved, ventrally carinate, 4-7 by 1.5-2.5 mm, strigillose, and with papery valves.

Overview

  • Species Common Name Lemmon's milkvetch
  • Species Scientific Name Astragalus lemmonii
  • Federal Listing Status Species of Concern
  • State Listing Status Threatened

Ecoregions

Special needs

Lemmon’s milkvetch forms colonies in moist, but often summer-dry, meadows and rushy flats along stream and lake shores. Grows in very deep, coarse textured soil.

Limiting factors

Threatened by grazing, development, human recreation, and non-native plants. Cattle grazing in a particular can cause soil compaction, introduction of invasive species, and damage Lemmon’s milkvetch from trampling. Altered site hydrology as a result of climate change and issues related to small population size are also threats.

Conservation actions

Protect, maintain, and restore habitat. Limit disturbance, especially grazing, at known sites. Monitor existing populations. Collect and bank seed as insurance against local extirpation or extinction and to use in ex-situ research.

Key reference or plan

Marshall, DA, and J Brown. 2023. 2023 listing status assessment for Astragalus lemmonii (Lemmon’s milkvetch). Oregon Department of Agriculture, Salem, Oregon.