Frequent throughout the state along railroads and roadsides and in lawns, waste places, and fields. It was probably mostly introduced in clover seed and lawn grass seed.
Duration: Annual
Nativity: Non-Native
Lifeform: Forb/Herb
General: Herbaceous annuals or perennials, to 60 cm tall, stems several, prostrate to decumbent or ascending, branching from the base, herbage pubescent to finely strigose.
Leaves: Alternate, pinnately trifoliate, leaflets obovate to suborbicular, 6-15 mm long, margins denticulate, at least on the upper half, stipules lance-ovate, entire or few-toothed, petioles 2-15 mm long.
Flowers: Yellow, very small, with banner, wing, and keel petals (papilionaceous), 2 mm long or less, keel petal shorter than the wing or banner petals, calyx tube campanulate with subequal teeth, villous, stamens diadelphous (9 fused, 1 free), flowers numerous, borne in ovoid, spike-like racemes, these becoming oblong in fruit, peduncles 10-25 mm long, (usually exceeding the leaves).
Fruits: Pods kidney-shaped, 1-2 mm long, coiled in 1 plane, strongly veined, black when ripe, surfaces glabrous, not prickly. Seeds 1 per pod.
Ecology: Found in disturbed areas, roadsides, and lawns, from 2,500-8,000 ft (762-2438 m); flowering March-September.
Distribution: Widespread throughout North America.
Notes: The tiny yellow flowers and kidney-shaped, unarmed seed pods coiled in 1 plane help identify this species. Naturalized from Europe.
Ethnobotany: There is no use recorded for this species, but other species in this genus have uses.
Etymology: Medicago is derived from Medike, or medick, the Greek name for alfalfa, which came to Greece from Medea, while lupulina means hop-like.
Synonyms: Medica lupulina
Editor: LCrumbacher 2012
Annual or biennial with prostrate or ascending stems to 8 dm; stipules lanceolate, entire or toothed; lfls elliptic to obovate, 1-2 cm; peduncles much exceeding the subtending lvs; heads globose to short-cylindric, to 1 cm; fls yellow, 10-50 per head, 2-4 mm; pods nearly black, 2-3 mm, reniform, unarmed, 1-seeded, the conspicuous veins tending to be longitudinal; 2n=16. Native of Eurasia, common as a weed in our range and elsewhere. May-Sept.
Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.
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