Английская Википедия:Astragalus bisulcatus

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Версия от 16:04, 3 февраля 2024; EducationBot (обсуждение | вклад) (Новая страница: «{{Английская Википедия/Панель перехода}} {{short description|Species of plant}} {{Speciesbox |image = Astragalus bisculatus.jpg |genus = Astragalus |species = bisulcatus |authority = (Hook.) A.Gray, 1860 }} '''''Astragalus bisulcatus''''', commonly called '''two-grooved milkvetch''' or '''silver-leafed milkvetch''', is a leafy perennial with pea-like flowers. It is native to central and western North America,<ref>{{C...»)
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Astragalus bisulcatus, commonly called two-grooved milkvetch or silver-leafed milkvetch, is a leafy perennial with pea-like flowers. It is native to central and western North America,[1] and typically grows on selenium-rich soils. It accumulates selenium within its tissues, and when livestock consume it, the selenium can be toxic.[2]

Description

Astragalus bisulcatus is a herbaceous perennial with a thick woody root-stock, growing 30 to 100 cm tall.[3] It has numerous simple stems and long pinnate leaves. The flowers are produced in narrow elongated racemes. The flowers are white or purple in color[4] and bloom in late spring and early summer. The seed pods characteristically are two grooved on the upper surface. The fruits ripen and release their seeds in July and August.[5] The seeds are dark brown or black, reniform in shape, 4 mm long and 2 mm wide.[3][6]

Selenium toxicity

Astragalus bisulcatus accumulates large quantities of selenium when grown on soils that have selenium, the plant produces amino acids where sulfur is replaced by selenium.[7] Most animals avoid Astragalus bisulcatus because of the musky odor of the dimethyl selenium compounds contained in the plants tissues.[8] Yet, sheep and cattle have indulged in eating the plant, becoming victims of selenium toxicity. Sheep can die in thirty minutes from eating a half a pound of Astragalus bisulcatus, and in 1907 and 1908, approximately 15,000 sheep in Wyoming died with symptoms of either alkali disease or the blind staggers; both of which were outcomes of digesting a large amount of selenium from Astragalus bisulcatus.[9]

References

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