Desmodium is a genus of plants in the legume family Fabaceae, sometimes called tick-trefoil, tick clover, hitch hikers or beggar lice.[2] There are dozens of species and the delimitation of the genus has shifted much over time. Species are distributed widely – from Quebec to northern Argentina in the Americas, across northern and southern tropical Africa, in the southern Arabian Peninsula, in Myanmar and Thailand, New Guinea, and northern and eastern Australia.[1]
Desmodium | |
---|---|
Desmodium heterocarpon | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Clade: | Rosids |
Order: | Fabales |
Family: | Fabaceae |
Subfamily: | Faboideae |
Tribe: | Desmodieae |
Subtribe: | Desmodiinae |
Genus: | Desmodium Desv. (1813), nom. cons. |
Species | |
Many, see text | |
Synonyms[1] | |
|
Description
editThese are mostly inconspicuous plants; few have bright or large flowers. Though some can become sizeable plants, most are herbs or small shrubs. Their fruit are loments, meaning each seed is dispersed individually enclosed in its segment. This makes them tenacious plants and some species are considered weeds in places.
Uses
editSeveral Desmodium species release organic compounds, aerially and into the soil, which make them useful for agriculture: Allelopathic compounds are used there via push-pull technology. For this Desmodium heterocarpon, Desmodium intortum, and Desmodium uncinatum are inter-cropped in maize and sorghum fields to suppress witchweeds, including Asiatic witchweed (Striga asiatica) and purple witchweed (S. hermonthica) and to repel Chilo partellus, a stem-boring grass moth.[3] Insects (including pests) are likewise repelled by high amounts of antixenotic allomones produced by Desmodium.
A blue dye is obtained from Desmodium incanum.
Tick-trefoils in agriculture can also be used as living mulch and as green manure, as they improve soil fertility via nitrogen fixation.
Most also make good fodder for animals including bobwhite, turkey, grouse, deer, cattle and goats.[3][4][5]
Wild-living, non-farmed deer appear to rely on Desmodium species in certain areas, particularly during the more stressful summer months.
The caterpillars of the lesser grass blue (Zizina otis) and the two-barred flasher (Astraptes fulgerator) feed on tick-trefoils.
Alkaloids
editSome Desmodium species have formerly been known to contain high amounts of tryptamine alkaloids, but many of the tryptamine-containing species have since been transferred to other genera.[3]
Taxonomy and systematics
editThe taxonomy and systematics of the many dozens of Desmodium species are confusing and unresolved. Related genera such as Codariocalyx, Hylodesmum, Lespedeza, Ohwia, and Phyllodium were and sometimes still are included in Desmodium.[6]
Taxonomic authorities commonly disagree about the naming and placement of species. For example, Desmodium spirale as described by August Grisebach might refer to a distinct species, but its validity is doubtful. The "Desmodium spirale" of other authorities may refer to D. neomexicanum, D. ospriostreblum, or D. procumbens. Similarly, the plant originally described as D. podocarpum by A. P. de Candolle is Hylodesmum podocarpum today, but "Desmodium podocarpum" might also refer to D. hookerianum or Hylodesmum laxum, depending on the taxonomic authority.[6]
Selected species
edit- Desmodium acanthocladum F.Muell.
- Desmodium canadense (L.) DC. – showy tick-trefoil, Canadian tick-trefoil
- Desmodium canescens (L.) DC. – hoary tick-trefoil
- Desmodium ciliare (Muhl.) DC. – hairy small-leaved tick-trefoil
- Desmodium cuspidatum (Muhl.) Loudon – toothed tick-trefoil, large-bracted tick-trefoil
- Desmodium fernaldii B.G.Schub.
- Desmodium glabellum (Michx.) DC.
- Desmodium heterocarpon (Michx.) DC. – Asian tick-trefoil
- Desmodium × humifusum (Muhl. ex Bigelow) Beck
- Desmodium illinoense A.Gray – Illinois tick-trefoil
- Desmodium incanum (Sw.) DC. – creeping beggarweed, Spanish tick-trefoil, Kaimi clover
- Desmodium intortum Greenleaf desmodium, kuru vine, beggarlice, tick clovers
- Desmodium lineatum (Michx.) DC. – linear-leaved tick-trefoil
- Desmodium marilandicum (L.) DC. – smooth small-leaved tick-trefoil
- Desmodium molliculum (Kunth) DC.
- Desmodium ospriostreblum Chiov.
- Desmodium paniculatum (L.) DC. – panicled tick-trefoil
- Desmodium perplexum B.G.Schub. – perplexed tick-trefoil
- Desmodium rotundifolium DC. – round-leaved tick-trefoil, dollar leaf
- Desmodium sessilifolium (Torr. ex M.A.Curtis) Torr. & A.Gray
- Desmodium tortuosum (Sw.) DC.
- Desmodium triflorum (L.) DC.
- Desmodium tweedyi Britton – Tweedy's tick-trefoil
- Desmodium uncinatum (Jacq.) DC.– silver-leaved tick-trefoil, silverleaf
- Desmodium varians (Labill.) G.Don
Formerly placed here
edit- Codariocalyx motorius – telegraph plant (as D. gyrans, D. motorium, D. roylei)
- Dendrolobium triangulare (as D. Desmodium umbellatum Moritz.)
- Dendrolobium umbellatum (as D. umbellatum (L.) Benth. )
- Hylodesmum laxum (as D. laxum DC.)
- Hylodesmum laxum ssp. laxum (as D. austro-japonense, D. bambusetorum, D. gardneri auct. non Benth., D. laxiflorum sensu Miq., D. laxum var. kiusianum, D. laxum ssp. laxum, D. podocarpum auct. non DC. non Hook. & Arn., D. podocarpum DC. var. gardneri sensu Bedd., D. podocarpum DC. var. laxum)
- Hylodesmum leptopus (as D. gardneri Benth., D. laxum auct. non DC., D. laxum ssp. leptopus, D. leptopus, D. tashiroi)
- Hylodesmum podocarpum (as D. podocarpum DC., D. podocarpum DC. var. indicum, D. podocarpum DC. var. japonicum)
- Hylodesmum podocarpum ssp. oxyphyllum (as D. fallax var. mandshuricum, D. japonicum, D. mandshuricum, D. oxyphyllum DC., D. podocarpum DC. var. mandshuricum, D. podocarpum DC. ssp./var. oxyphyllum, D. podocarpum DC. var. polyphyllum, D. podocarpum DC. var. typicum, D. racemosum)
- Lespedeza thunbergii (as D. formosum, D. thunbergii)
- Lespedeza thunbergii var. thunbergii (as D. penduliflorum Oudem.)
- Maekawaea macrocarpa (as D. macrocarpum)
- Maekawaea rhytidophylla (as D. rhytidophyllum)
- Maekawaea tenax (as D. tenax)
- Ohwia caudata (as D. caudatum)
- Phyllodium pulchellum (as D. pulchellum)
References
edit- International Legume Database & Information Service (ILDIS) (2005): Genus Desmodium. Version 10.01, November 2005. Retrieved 2007-DEC-17.
- ^ a b c "Desmodium Desv". Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 1 August 2023.
- ^ "Desmodium (Beggarlice, Beggars Lice, Hitch Hikers, Tick's Clover, Tick-trefoil) | North Carolina Extension Gardener Plant Toolbox".
- ^ a b c "The Plant Encyclopedia - Desmodium". The Plant Encyclopedia. Retrieved 17 January 2014.
- ^ "Plants Profile for Desmodium (ticktrefoil)". plants.usda.gov.
- ^ "Know Your Deer Plants: Beggar's Lice - Quality Deer Management Association". 25 January 2012. Archived from the original on 14 August 2020. Retrieved 1 September 2016.
- ^ a b c ILDIS (2005)
- ^ Pires Lima LC, de Queiroz LP, de Azevedo Tozzi AMG, Lewis GP (2014). "A Taxonomic Revision of Desmodium (Leguminosae, Papilionoideae) in Brazil". Phytotaxa. 169 (1): 1–119. doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.169.1.1.
External links
edit- Trout, K. (2002). Trout's Notes on the Genus Desmodium. Mydriatic Productions. Better Days Publishing.