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Taxon:
Sesbania exaltata
(Raf.) Rydb.
Nomenclature
Common Names
Distribution
Economic Uses
Summary
Genus:
Sesbania
Family:
Fabaceae
(alt. Leguminosae)
Subfamily:
Faboideae
Tribe:
Sesbanieae
Nomen number:
33768
Place of publication:
N. Amer. fl. 24:204. 1924 "
Sesban
" (A. W. Hill, Index kewensis suppl. 7:223. 1929; Cory, Rhodora 38:406. 1936)
Verified:
10/03/1989
ARS Systematic Botanists.
Accessions:
0
(
0
active,
0
available)
in National Plant Germplasm System.
Other conspecific taxa
Autonyms (not in current use), synonyms and invalid designations
Basionym
Darwinia exaltata
Raf.
Heterotypic Synonym(s)
Sesbania herbacea
auct. N. Amer.
Sesbania macrocarpa
Muhl., nom. nud.
No images
Reference(s)
Allen, O. N. & E. K. Allen.
The Leguminosae. A source book of characteristics, uses, and nodulation. 1981
Barbosa, C.
1994. Contribución al conocimiento de las leguminosas Colombianas. I. La tribu Galegeae (Brown) Torrey & Gray, 1838
sensu lato
. Trianea 5:51.
Cooper, M. R. & A. W. Johnson.
Poisonous plants in Britain and their effects on animals and man. 1984
Correll, D. S. & H. B. Correll.
Aquatic and wetland plants of southwestern United States, 2 vol. 1975
Correll, D. S. & M. C. Johnston.
Manual of the vascular plants of Texas. 1970
Duke, J. A.
Handbook of legumes of world economic importance. 1981
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).
2010. Ecocrop (on-line resource).
Gleason, H. A. & A. Cronquist.
Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. 1963
Isely, D.
1986. Notes about
Psoralea
sensu auct.,
Amorpha
,
Baptisia
,
Sesbania
and
Chamaecrista
(Leguminosae) in the Southeastern United States. Sida 11:435.
Kearney, T. H. & R. H. Peebles.
Arizona flora, ed. 2. 1969
Lampe, K. F. & M. A. McCann.
AMA handbook of poisonous and injurious plants. 1985
Liberty Hyde Bailey Hortorium.
Hortus third. 1976
Magness, J. R. et al.
Food and feed crops of the United States. IR Bull. 1. 1971
Markle, G. M. et al., eds.
Food and feed crops of the United States, ed. 2. 1998
McGregor, R. L. et al. (The Great Plains Flora Association).
Flora of the Great Plains. 1986
Munz, P. A.
A flora of southern California. 1974
Porcher, M. H. et al.
Searchable World Wide Web Multilingual Multiscript Plant Name Database (MMPND) (on-line resource).
Radford, A. E. et al., eds.
Vascular flora of the southeastern United States. 1980-
Radford, A. E. et al.
Manual of the vascular flora of the Carolinas. 1964
Recasens, J. & J. A. Conesa.
1995. Nuevas malas hierbas alóctonas en los cultivos de regadío de Cataluña. Actas Reun. Soc. Esp. Malherbol. 59-65.
Rehm, S.
Multilingual dictionary of agronomic plants. 1994
Seed Regulatory and Testing Division, Agricultural Marketing Service, U.S.D.A.
State noxious-weed seed requirements recognized in the administration of the Federal Seed Act (updated annually).
Steyermark, J. A.
Flora of Missouri. 1977
University of California Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program.
UC SAREP on-line cover crop database (on-line resource).
Wilbur, R. L.
1989. The status of the binomial
Sesbania macrocarpa
Muhl. (Leguminosae). Castanea 54:121-127.
Wilbur, R. L.
Leguminous plants of North Carolina. 1963
Common names
English
coffee-bean –
Reference(s)
Colorado River-hemp –
Reference(s)
hemp sesbania –
Reference(s)
peatree –
Reference(s)
sesbania –
Reference(s)
Distribution
Exportable format
order_code
Status
Continent
Subcontinent
Country
State
Note
1
Native
Northern America
North-Central U.S.A.
United States
Kansas
1
Native
Northern America
North-Central U.S.A.
United States
Missouri
1
Native
Northern America
North-Central U.S.A.
United States
Oklahoma
1
Native
Northern America
South-Central U.S.A.
United States
Texas
1
Native
Northern America
Southeastern U.S.A.
United States
Alabama
1
Native
Northern America
Southeastern U.S.A.
United States
Arkansas
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
Louisiana
1
Native
Northern America
Southeastern U.S.A.
United States
Mississippi
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
2
Cultivated
4
Naturalized
Native
Northern America
NORTH-CENTRAL U.S.A.:
United States
[Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma]
SOUTH-CENTRAL U.S.A.:
United States
[Texas]
SOUTHEASTERN U.S.A.:
United States
[Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee]
Cultivated
()
Naturalized
()
Economic Uses
Usage
Type
Note
Reference
Environmental
soil improver
Magness, J. R. et al.
Food and feed crops of the United States. IR Bull. 1. 1971
Vertebrate poisons
mammals
Lampe, K. F. & M. A. McCann.
AMA handbook of poisonous and injurious plants. 1985
Weed
potential seed contaminant
Recasens, J. & J. A. Conesa.
1995. Nuevas malas hierbas alóctonas en los cultivos de regadío de Cataluña. Actas Reun. Soc. Esp. Malherbol. 59-65.
Cite as: USDA, Agricultural Research Service, National Plant Germplasm System.
2024
. Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN Taxonomy). National Germplasm Resources Laboratory, Beltsville, Maryland.
URL:
https://ausgenebank.agriculture.vic.gov.au/gringlobal/taxon/taxonomydetail?id=33768
. Accessed
5 October 2024
.
Name
References
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