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Fabaceae FAMILY

Astragalus dipodurus

Astragalus dipodurus

Edibility
2/5
Medicinal
2/5

Safety & Hazards

Many members of this genus contain toxic glycosides[ 65 Title A Colour Atlas of Poisonous Plants. Publication Author Frohne. D. and Pfänder. J. Publisher Wolfe Year 1984 ISBN 0723408394 Description Brilliant. Goes into technical details but in a very readable way. The best work on the subject that I've come across so far. ]. A number of species can accumulate toxic levels of selenium when grown in soils that are relatively rich in that element[ 65 Title A Colour Atlas of Poisonous Plants. Publication Author Frohne. D. and Pfänder. J. Publisher Wolfe Year 1984 ISBN 0723408394 Description Brilliant. Goes into technical details but in a very readable way. The best work on the subject that I've come across so far. ]. All species with edible seedpods can be distinguished by their fleshy round or oval seedpod that looks somewhat like a greengage.[ 85 Title Edible Native Plants of the Rocky Mountains. Publication Author Harrington. H. D. Publisher University of New Mexico Press Year 1967 ISBN 0-8623-0343-9 Description A superb book. Very readable, it gives the results of the authors experiments with native edible plants. ]

Botanical Description

Astragalus dipodurus is a thorny, cushion-forming perennial plant with stems that become more or less woody; it forms a loose mat of growth 30 - 50cm tall[ 1086 Title Systematic revision of Astragalus sect. Adiaspastus, sect. Macrophyllium and sect. Pterophorus (Fabaceae) Publication Englera 18 Author Shahin Zarre-Mobarakeh Website http://www.bgbm.fu-berlin.de Publisher Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin-Dahlem, Germany Year 2000 ISBN 3-921800-42-0 Description An extensive revision of three gum-producing sections of the genus Astragalus, though it does not include section Rhacophorus, which is the main commercial producer of Gum Tragacanth ]. The plant is a source of a good quality tragacanth gum - a substance with many uses in medicine, as a food additive and in industry. Although a good quantity of gum is produced, the plant is only found in scattered populations and so is not suitable for commercial exploitation[ 1086 Title Systematic revision of Astragalus sect. Adiaspastus, sect. Macrophyllium and sect. Pterophorus (Fabaceae) Publication Englera 18 Author Shahin Zarre-Mobarakeh Website http://www.bgbm.fu-berlin.de Publisher Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin-Dahlem, Germany Year 2000 ISBN 3-921800-42-0 Description An extensive revision of three gum-producing sections of the genus Astragalus, though it does not include section Rhacophorus, which is the main commercial producer of Gum Tragacanth ].

Habitat & Origin

Origintemperate
Native RangeWestern Asia - southern Turkey, northern Syria, northwest Iran
HabitatFound at elevations from 600 - 1,700 metres[ 1086 Title Systematic revision of Astragalus sect. Adiaspastus, sect. Macrophyllium and sect. Pterophorus (Fabaceae) Publication Englera 18 Author Shahin Zarre-Mobarakeh Website http://www.bgbm.fu-berlin.de Publisher Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin-Dahlem, Germany Year 2000 ISBN 3-921800-42-0 Description An extensive revision of three gum-producing sections of the genus Astragalus, though it does not include section Rhacophorus, which is the main commercial producer of Gum Tragacanth ].