No image available
Fabaceae FAMILY

Astragalus exscapus

Astragalus exscapus

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 exscapus is a dwarf, deciduous shrub with no stem or a short stem up to 10cm long and short branches that become more or less woody. The plant grows 10 - 25cm tall[ 74 Title Flora of the USSR. Publication Author Komarov. V. L. Website http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org Publisher Israel Program for Scientific Translation Year 1968 ISBN - Description An immense (25 or more large volumes) and not yet completed translation of the Russian flora. Full of information on plant uses and habitats but heavy going for casual readers. It can be downloaded from the Internet. ]. The plant is harvested from the wild for local use as a medicine and coffee substitute.

Habitat & Origin

Origintemperate
Native RangeC. Europe - Germany to Italy, east to Ukraine and Greece; W. Asia - Turkey.
HabitatSteppe and foothills, on limestone soils[ 261 Title Legumes of Northern Eurasia Publication Author Yakovlev. G. Sytin. A. & Roskov. Yu. Publisher Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Year 1996 ISBN 0-947643-97-4 Description For the academic only, a list of species growing in N. Eurasia with terse details on habitat, range, uses etc. ].