Vicia villosa Roth
Family: Fabaceae
Winter Vetch,  more...
Vicia villosa image
From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam

This vetch has been sparingly sown as a forage crop throughout the state and has escaped to roadsides and fallow fields. I found it to be frequent in 1930 in sandy soil along the river road about a mile west of Georgetown, Cass County. The landowner of the adjacent field told me that he had the field in hairy vetch 14 years before, therefore we have a record of its persistence for that length of time. Now frequent along the roadsides throughout northern Indiana.

Annual or biennial to 1 m, the stems spreading-villous, especially upwards; lfls usually 5-10 pairs, narrowly oblong to lance-linear, 1-2.5 cm; racemes long-peduncled, dense, secund, with 10-40 fls; cal irregular, villous, the tube 2.3-4 mm, very gibbous, the pedicel apparently ventral; upper lobes linear-triangular, 0.8-1.5 mm; lateral and lower lobes linear above a triangular base, the lowest 2-5 mm, long-villous; cor slender, 12-20 mm, the spreading blade of the standard less than half as long as the claw; fr 2-3 cm, glabrous; 2n=14. Native of Europe, intr. in fields, roadsides, and waste places throughout most of the U.S. and s. Can. June-Aug.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

Vicia villosa image
Vicia villosa image
Steven J. Baskauf  
Vicia villosa image
Charles Webber  
Vicia villosa image
Charles Webber  
Vicia villosa image
Charles Webber  
Vicia villosa image
Steven J. Baskauf  
Vicia villosa image
Steven J. Baskauf  
Vicia villosa image
Steven J. Baskauf  
Vicia villosa image
Steven J. Baskauf  
Vicia villosa image
Steven J. Baskauf