Duration: Annual
Nativity: Non-Native
Lifeform: Forb/Herb
General: Erect annual to 1 m tall with glabrous herbage or leaves and inflorescences sparsely appressed-pubescent when young, stipules subulate or narrowly lanceolate, 3-8 mm long.
Leaves: Slender petioles to 5 cm long, leaflets cuneate-oblong to obovate, 3-12 mm wide, 1-2.5 cm long, obtuse, rounded or truncate, denticulate.
Flowers: Peduncles surpass subtending leaves, racemes numerous, 2-10 cm long, about 5 mm in diameter; flowers 2.5 mm long, calyx half as long, its teeth triangular, sparsely ciliolate, pealike, petals yellow.
Fruits: Ovoid pods 2-2.5 mm long, reticulate, glabrous, usually 1-seeded.
Ecology: Occasional along roadsides, ditches, in fields, and in disturbed areas; flowers April-September.
Distribution: Introduced to much of the U.S. except CO and KS, north to central CAN.; south to S. Amer.; throughout the world on every continent.
Notes: Widespread introduced ruderal with yellow flowers, distinguished from M. officinalis by being <1m tall; having smaller flowers < 2.5mm and being solely annual, and from M. albus by having yellow flowers.
Ethnobotany: Used as a bed bug repellant, as a strong laxative, and for games.
Etymology: Melilotus is from Greek meli, honey and lotos, a leguminous plant, while indicus refers to India.
Synonyms: None
Editor: SBuckley 2010, FSCoburn 2015
Ascending or erect annual 2-6 dm; racemes very densely fld, 3-8 cm; pedicels at anthesis 0.5-0.8 mm, ascending; fls yellow, 2-3 mm; cal-teeth lance-oblong, obtuse; fr 1.5-3 mm, strongly reticulate-veiny; otherwise as no. 2 [Melilotus officinalis (L.) Pall.]; 2n=16. Native of the Mediterranean region, now a cosmopolitan weed, abundant in the s. and Pacific states, and adventive in our range. Summer.
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.
Plant: Annual, ± glabrous; stem spreading or erect, 1-6 dm
Leaves: odd-1-pinnate; leaflets 1-2.5 cm, oblanceolate to wedge-shaped-obovate, generally sharply dentate
INFLORESCENCE: raceme, slender, compact, many-flowered; axis generally 1-2 cm when flowers open
Flowers: calyx 1-1.5 mm, lobes ± equal; corolla 2.5-3 mm, yellow; 9 filaments fused, 1 free
Fruit: legume, indehiscent, 2-3 mm, ovoid, bumpy or with obscure lines; seed 1
Misc: Open, disturbed areas; < 1500 m.; Apr-Oct