Skip Navigation
Sign In
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Chicago Botanic Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Denver Botanic Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Desert Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • NY Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Sitemap

Coursetia glandulosa

Coursetia glandulosa A. Gray  
Family: Fabaceae
Rosary Baby-Bonnets, more...rosary babybonnets, baby bonnets, coursetia (es: sámota, samo prieto, chino, cousamo, cousano, (tepe) chipile)
[Coursetia microphylla A. Gray, moreCoursetia seleri var. caeciliae Harms]
Coursetia glandulosa image
Max Licher
  • SW Field Guide
  • Resources
Lavin 1988, Kearney and Peebles 1969
Common Name: rosary babybonnets Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Shrub General: Spreading shrub, up to 10 m, with light gray, somewhat rough bark, unarmed. Leaves: Pinnate with mostly 5 pairs, usually 8-18 leaflets per leaf, oval to narrowly elliptic, 9-50 mm long, 2-20 mm across, appressed hairy. Flowers: Inflorescence racemose and sessile with flowers cream and yellow with a banner and keel, sepals reddish and pubescent, the calyx 5-7 mm long rounded at base, tube 3-4 mm long, corolla banner whitish, blade 11-15 mm long, 14-15 mm wide, orbicular with wings 11-15 mm, whitish to yellowish near the tips. Fruits: Long, thin pod, constricted between the seeds, 2-11 cm long, 5-7 mm wide, stipitate glandular with sinuous margins. Ecology: Found on wash edges, dry rocky slopes, and canyons, from 2,000-4,000 ft (610-1219 m); flowers March-April. Distribution: Ranges from southern Arizona south through Sinaloa and Chihuahua and down the west cost of Mexico as far south as Oaxaca. Notes: Distinguished by the small light gray to tan branches and the small pinnate leaves, but difficult to identify when not in flower. First glance it appears like an Acaciella or the like, but note the lack of spines and when flowering the raceme of cream flowers is not only beautiful, but very distinctive. Distinguished from the Mexican species by the stipitate glands on the flowers and rachis of the flowers, generally found on rocky slopes. Ethnobotany: Resin of plant was used as a gum to seal jars by the Papago. Etymology: Coursetia is named for George Louis Marie Dumont de Courset (1746-1824), a French botanist, while glandulosa means bearing glands. Synonyms: Coursetia microphylla Editor: LCrumbacher, 2011
Coursetia glandulosa
Open Interactive Map
Coursetia glandulosa image
Liz Makings
Coursetia glandulosa image
Fred Fisher
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Anthony Mendoza
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Leslie Landrum
Coursetia glandulosa image
Eugene, (Gene) Sturla
Coursetia glandulosa image
Anthony Mendoza
Coursetia glandulosa image
Stephen Hale
Coursetia glandulosa image
Stephen Hale
Coursetia glandulosa image
Stephen Hale
Coursetia glandulosa image
Leslie Landrum
Coursetia glandulosa image
Eugene, (Gene) Sturla
Coursetia glandulosa image
Eugene, (Gene) Sturla
Coursetia glandulosa image
Eugene, (Gene) Sturla
Coursetia glandulosa image
Cecelia Alexander
Coursetia glandulosa image
Jack Dash
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue D. Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Jack Dash
Coursetia glandulosa image
Guillermo Molina
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Jack Dash
Coursetia glandulosa image
Jack Dash
Coursetia glandulosa image
Guillermo Molina
Coursetia glandulosa image
Anthony Mendoza
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Sue Carnahan
Coursetia glandulosa image
Liz Makings
Coursetia glandulosa image
Diane Drobka
Coursetia glandulosa image
M.C. Bernal
Coursetia glandulosa image
Diane Drobka
Coursetia glandulosa image
M.C. Bernal
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Mingna Zhuang
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Coursetia glandulosa image
Click to Display
100 Initial Media
- - - - -
View All Media
Institute for Museum and Library Services KU BI Logo Logo for the Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

EcoFlora is part of the SEINet Portal Network. Learn more here.

Powered by Symbiota.