Description Members of Flemingia are shrubs, or herbs (or subshrubs); evergreen, or deciduous and perennial. They are generally about 0.2-1.5 m high. The stem is prostrate but weak. Leaves are small to medium-sized; not fasciculate, but alternate. The stem and leaves are pubescent, with dense hairs. Leaf blades are flat dorsoventrally. This datasheet on Flemingia macrophylla covers Identity, Overview, Distribution, Dispersal, Biology & Ecology, Environmental Requirements, Natural Enemies, Impacts, Uses, Prevention/Control, Management, Genetics and Breeding, Economics, Further Information. Identity Preferred Scientific Name Flemingia macrophylla (Willd.) Merr.
Flemingia macrophylla efloraofindia
Flemingia macrophylla is a tropical woody leguminous shrub in the family Fabaceae. It is a multipurpose plant widely used in agriculture, crop improvement, fodder, dyes and for various therapeutic purposes. Perhaps, it is the most versatile species of Flemingia in terms of adaptation, medicinal and agricultural applications. Description Flemingia congesta Roxb. ex Ait.f. Taxonomy Loading Content. Properties Flemingia macrophylla is a woody, deep-rooting, tussock-forming shrub, 1-4 m tall. Young branches greenish, ribbed, triangular in section and silky. Old stems brown, almost round in section. Flemingia congesta Roxb. ex W.T. Aiton; Moghania macrophylla (Willd.) Kuntze Family/tribe Family: Fabaceae (alt. Leguminosae) subfamily: Faboideae tribe: Phaseoleae subtribe: Cajaninae. Morphological description Perennial, deep-rooting, leafy shrub, 0.5‒2.5 (‒3) m high. Prostrate to erect growth habit, numerous stems arising from the base. For example, in areas of north-east India where the shifting agricultural cycle is less than 5 years and the landscape is highly degraded, a legume of lesser known food value, Flemingia vestita, is socially valued and used to support a 1-2 year fallow and even nonfallow system of cultivation.
Flemingia macrophylla efloraofindia
20 Images see all Flemingia congesta Roxb. ex W.T.Aiton [family LEGUMINOSAE-PAPILIONOIDEAE] Flemingia congesta Roxb. ex W.T.Aiton [family LEGUMINOSAE-PAPILIONOIDEAE] Type? of Flemingia cumingiana Bentham [family FABACEAE] Filed as Flemingia congesta Roxb. ex Ait. [family FABACEAE] Flemingia congesta Roxb. , Hort. Kew., ed. 2 [W.T. Aiton] 4: 349 (1812). BHL Contact us External links to taxonomic opinions: WFO IPNI Life Sciences Identifier (LSID) urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:495250-1 Publication Hortus Kewensis; or, a Catalogue of the Plants Cultivated in the Royal Botanic Garden at Kew. London2nd ed.) Collation 4: 349 Flemingia capitata Buch.-Ham. Flemingia congesta Roxb. ex Aiton & W. T. Aiton Flemingia cumingiana Benth. Flemingia ferruginea Graham Flemingia lamontii Hance Flemingia latifolia Benth. Flemingia nana Roxb. Flemingia philippinensis Merr. & Rolfe Flemingia semialata Roxb. Flemingia stricta Wall. Flemingia teysmanniana Miq Flemingia trinerva Desf. Flemingia Flemingia macrophylla (Willd.) Kuntze ex Merr. First published in Philipp. J. Sci., C 5: 130 (1910) This species is accepted The native range of this species is Tropical & Subtropical Asia to N. Queensland. It is a subshrub or shrub and grows primarily in the wet tropical biome. Taxonomy Images General information Distribution Synonyms
Flemingia macrophylla efloraofindia
Sinorhizobium fredii NGR234-Phaseolus vulgaris, Flemingia congesta: Protein phosphorylation: Rhizobium-specific: Nucleus: MAP Kinase: Suppresses the expression of pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins on L. japonicus, inhibits P. vulgaris nodule-senescence, promotes nodulation of F. congesta: Marie et al. 2003; Bartsev et al. 2004; Zhang et al. Syntype of Crotalaria cavaleriei H.Lev. [family LEGUMINOSAE] Isotype of Flemingia congesta Roxb. [family LEGUMINOSAE-PAPILIONACEAE] Filed as Flemingia kweichowensis Tang & F. T. Wang ex Y. T. Wei & S. K. Lee [family FABACEAE] Type of Flemingia yunnanensis Franch. [family FABACEAE] Flemingia macrophylla (Willd.) Kuntze ex Merr. [family FABACEAE]
Shin Okazaki Add to Mendeley https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pbi.2017.05.011 Get rights and content Highlights • Beneficial microbes modulate host-signaling pathways using effectors. • Rhizobia use the similar effectors as pathogenic bacteria to suppress host defenses. • Rhizobial effectors can hijack leguminous nodulation Rhizobium sp. NGR234 nodulates many plants, some of which react to proteins secreted via a type three secretion system (T3SS) in a positive- ( Flemingia congesta, Tephrosia vogelii) or negative- ( Crotalaria juncea, Pachyrhizus tuberosus) manner.
Flemingia efloraofindia
nia barteri or Flemingia congesta as hedgerow species. The alley-cropping systems consisted of rows of trees of the same species, separating alleys 4.5 m wide and 20 m long in which maize and cassava were planted. They were replicated 4 times in a block design. Experi-ment II was conducted on a clean- weeded plot (9 x 5m) in a field with no. Global description Flemingia macrophylla is a shrub, reaching over 2 m high, with more or less ribbed branches, covered with a dense pubescence of appressed hairs. The leaves are alternate, compound, trifoliate, with oval-triangular stipules, deciduous; the leaflets are elliptic to closely ovate-oblong, 4 to 15 cm long and 2 to 8 cm wide, acute to acuminate at the top, having a pubescent.