Taxon:
Baptisia albescens Small
Summary
Place of publication:
Fl. s.e. U.S. 600. 1903
Verified:
07/16/2018
ARS Systematic Botanists.
Autonyms (not in current use), synonyms and invalid designations
Reference(s)
- Isely, D. 1986. Notes about Psoralea sensu auct., Amorpha, Baptisia, Sesbania and Chamaecrista (Leguminosae) in the Southeastern United States. Sida 11:434. URL: http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/bibliography/8113#/summary
- Isely, D. 1998. Native and naturalized Leguminosae (Fabaceae) of the United States (exclusive of Alaska and Hawaii)
- Radford, A. E. et al., eds. 1980-. Vascular flora of the southeastern United States.
- Turner, B. L. 2006. Overview of the genus Baptisia (Leguminosae). Phytologia 88:254. URL: http://www.phytologia.org/
- Weakley, A. S. 2015. Flora of the southern and mid-Atlantic states URL: http://www.herbarium.unc.edu/flora.ht
Common names
English (US)
narrow-pod white wild indigo – spiked wild indigo –
Distribution
order_code | Status | Continent | Subcontinent | Country | State | Note |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southeastern U.S.A. | United States | Alabama | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southeastern U.S.A. | United States | Florida | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southeastern U.S.A. | United States | Georgia | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southeastern U.S.A. | United States | North Carolina | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southeastern U.S.A. | United States | South Carolina | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southeastern U.S.A. | United States | Tennessee | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southeastern U.S.A. | United States | Virginia | |
Native
Northern America
-
SOUTHEASTERN U.S.A.:
United States [Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia]