Trailing wild-bean (Strophostyles helvola) flowers and fruit at 63rd St Beach. Right: two trailing wild-bean flowers with the characteristic (and peculiar) twisted keel on what is otherwise a typical pea-type flower. The functional implications are unknown. Left: two developing seed pods of trailing wild-bean; neither is fully mature.
Trailing wild-bean is a native annual, a sprawling or climbing vine 3-9 feet long found in sandy habitats. The stems are slender, round in section, range from light green to dull reddish, and are quite hairy; they produce occasional branches and can twine around neighboring plants. Leaves are alternate, trifoliate compound, with broadly oval to teardrop shaped leaflets 1-2″ long and 1/2-1.25″ across, widest at the base with a pointed tip. The terminal leaflet may be slightly larger and has a short stalk (petiolule); the lateral leaflets are sessile. Sometimes the bases of the leaflets have a shallow lobe on each side of the midline. The compound leaf has a 1-2″ long, slightly fuzzy petiole. Some leaf axils produce 3-6″ long flower stalks (peduncles) with 3-10 nearly stalkless flower buds at the tip, only a few of which are open at any one time. The flowers are 1/3-1/2″ across, light pink to creamy pink, pea-like with five petals, but the keel is sharply curled upward such that it almost touches the banner (the vertical petal). The fruit is a bean-like seedpod, 2-3.5″ long, sparsely covered with short hairs, initially green but turning dark brown as it matures; the seeds are oblong, black, and are also covered with short hairs.
Trailing wild-bean (Strophostyles helvola) stems and leaves. The stem is a vine that wanders across the landscape. The leaves are trifoliate compound with the lateral leaflets sessile on the petiole and the terminal leaflet on a short petiolule. Top: the reddish stem of trailing wild bean twining around adjacent plants and deploying leaves at regular intervals. Bottom right: a view of the vine from above with the leaves randomly oriented. Bottom left: a trifoliate compound leaf of trailing wild-bean; the petiolule of the terminal leaflet is especially well displayed. The back side of one of the flowers can be seen to the right.
Trailing wild-bean is a native annual, a sprawling or climbing vine 3-9 feet long found in sandy habitats. The stems are slender, round in section, range from light green to dull reddish, and are quite hairy; they produce occasional branches and can twine around neighboring plants. Leaves are alternate, trifoliate compound, with broadly oval to teardrop shaped leaflets 1-2″ long and 1/2-1.25″ across, widest at the base with a pointed tip. The terminal leaflet may be slightly larger and has a short stalk (petiolule); the lateral leaflets are sessile. Sometimes the bases of the leaflets have a shallow lobe on each side of the midline. The compound leaf has a 1-2″ long, slightly fuzzy petiole.
