Goat’s-rue (Tephrosia virginiana) flowers and fruit. Top right: two goat’s-rue flowers showing the yellow, upright banner and the two rosy-pink lateral petals; the keel is hidden within the two lateral petals. In the flower on the left, the reproductive column (white arrow; fused stamens and pistil with a terminal style) can be seen protruding out of the keel and between two lateral petals. Top left: a single vertical raceme of goat’s-rue flowers (lower on the floral stalk) and buds (above). Bottom right: a single seedpod of goat’s-rue viewed from the side. Note the dense, silky hairs covering the pod and the remnants of the flower calyx (on the right). Bottom left: a cluster of goat’s-rue seed pods, the fruits of a raceme of flowers.
The tips of the stems of goat’s-rue give rise to 2-3″ long racemes of buds and flowers. The unmistakable, bicolored pea-like flowers are about 1/2-3/4″ wide and long, creamy white or yellowish on the vertical petal (the “standard”) and rosy-pink on the lateral wings and the keel. (A total of five petals.) The flowers consist of a short, tubular calyx with five teeth, five petals in a pea-like configuration, 10 stamens (nine with fused filaments, one free from its midpoint) with small yellow anthers, and a single pistil with a tiny terminal stigma. Both stamens and pistil are enclosed by the keel. The seedpods are 1.5-3″ long, cylindrical, slightly flattened beans spreading laterally from the flower spike; these, too, are (densely) silky-hairy. The seedpods are initially light green but turn brown with maturity. They split along the symmetry plane of the seedpod and the valves develop a spiral curl to release the seeds. Goat’s-rue prefers sandy habitats. The long, woody roots contain rotenone, a compound that is toxic to fish and insects; it inhibits ATP production and disrupts mitochondrial function by blocking the electron transport chain. It would not be a good idea to suck on or ingest the roots of goat’s-rue.
Goat’s-rue (Tephrosia virginiana) stems and leaves. All parts of goat’s-rue — stems, leaves, flowers, and seeds are luxuriously hairy. In the main image, a number of the odd-pinnate compound leaves can be seen coming off the hairy stems. The insert on the upper left shows a portion of the underside of a compound leaf with its hairy rachis, hairy midveins of the leaflets, and the midvein protruding from the tip of each leaflet as a spine.
Goat’s-rue stems are light green, sparsely branched, round in section, and hairy. The leaves are compound, odd-pinnate, with 9-25 elongate-oval leaflets about 1/4″ wide and 1/2-1″ long. The petiole and rachis are covered with short hairs; a pair of 1/4″ long, narrow stipules flank the base of the petiole. The leaflets are grayish green, variably hairy, with a clear central vein that protrudes from the tip of the blade as a spine.
A healthy colony of goat’s-rue (Tephrosia virginiana) at 63rd St. Beach. Note the dense pinnate foliage and the numerous vertical racemes of flowers.
Goat’s-rue is a native perennial that produces sprawling, multistemmed colonies that are only 1-2 feet tall bearing distinctive bi-colored, pea-like flowers. All parts of the stems, petioles, and foliage are hairy to some degree. The stems are light green, sparsely branched, round in section, and hairy. The leaves are compound, odd-pinnate, with 9-25 elongate-oval leaflets about 1/4″ wide and 1/2-1″ long. The petiole and rachis are covered with short hairs; a pair of 1/4″ long, narrow stipules flank the base of the petiole. The leaflets are grayish green, variably hairy, with a clear central vein that protrudes from the tip of the blade as a spine. The tips of the stems give rise to 2-3″ long racemes of buds and flowers. The unmistakable, bicolored pea-like flowers are about 1/2-3/4″ wide and long, creamy white or yellowish on the vertical petal (the “standard”) and rosy-pink on the lateral wings and the keel. (A total of five petals.) The flowers consist of a short, tubular calyx with five teeth, five petals in a pea-like configuration, 10 stamens (nine with fused filaments, one free from its midpoint) with small yellow anthers, and a single pistil with a tiny terminal stigma. Both stamens and pistil are enclosed by the keel. The seedpods are 1.5-3″ long, cylindrical, slightly flattened beans spreading laterally from the flower spike; these, too, are (densely) silky-hairy. The seedpods are initially light green but turn brown with maturity. They split along the symmetry plane of the seedpod and the valves develop a spiral curl to release the seeds. Goat’s-rue prefers sandy habitats. The long, woody roots contain rotenone, a compound that is toxic to fish and insects; it inhibits ATP production and disrupts mitochondrial function by blocking the electron transport chain. It would not be a good idea to suck on or ingest the roots of goat’s-rue.
