Taxon:
Phaseolus coccineus L.
Summary
Place of publication:
Sp. pl. 2:724. 1753
Verified:
08/07/2010
ARS Systematic Botanists.
Autonyms (not in current use), synonyms and invalid designations
Reference(s)
- Aldén, B., S. Ryman & M. Hjertson. Våra kulturväxters namn - ursprung och användning. Formas, Stockholm (Handbook on Swedish cultivated and utility plants, their names and origin). 2009 Note:
- based on Alden, B. & S. Ryman. 2005-: SKUD (Swedish Utility and Cultivated Plants Database)
- http://www.skud.info
- Baudet, J. C. 1977. Origine et classification des espèces cultivées du genre Phaseolus. Bull. Soc. Roy. Bot. Belgique 110:69.
- Budanova, V. I. & N. R. Ivanov. 1973. K sistematike roda Phaseolus L. (To the sistematics of the genus Phaseolus L.). Trudy Prikl. Bot. 51:28.
- Duke, J. A. Handbook of legumes of world economic importance. 1981
- Encke, F. et al. Zander: Handwörterbuch der Pflanzennamen, 13. Auflage. 1984
- Escalante, A. M. et al. 1994. Genetic structure and mating systems in wild and cultivated populations of Phaseolus coccineus and P. vulgaris (Fabaceae). Amer. J. Bot. 81:1096-1103. http://www.amjbot.org
- Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). 2010. Ecocrop (on-line resource). Note: http://ecocrop.fao.org/ecocrop/srv/en/cropListDetails?code=&relation=beginsWith&name=Phaseolus+coccineus&quantity=1
- Freytag, G. F. & D. G. Debouck. 2002. Taxonomy, distribution, and ecology of the genus Phaseolus (Leguminosae-Papilionoideae) in North America, Mexico and Central America. Sida, Bot. Misc. 23:55-98.
- International Seed Testing Association. A Multilingual Glossary of Common Plant-Names 1. Field crops, grasses and vegetables, ed. 2. 1982
- Kingsbury, J. M. Poisonous plants of the United States and Canada. 1964
- Lee, Y. N. Flora of Korea. 1997
- Leitão, H. F. 1974. Contribuição ao estudo taxonômico do gênero Phaseolus L. no Brasil. Bragantia 33:62.
- Liberty Hyde Bailey Hortorium. Hortus third. 1976
- Maesen, L. J. G. van der & Sadikin Somaatmadja, eds. 1989. Pulses. Plant Resources of South-East Asia (PROSEA). 1989- 1:56. http://proseanet.org
- Mahuku, G. S. et al. 2003. Sources of resistance to angular leaf spot (Phaeoisariopsis griseola) in common bean core collection, wild Phaseolus vulgaris and secondary gene pool. Euphytica 130:303-313.
- Maréchal, R. et al. 1978. Étude taxonomique d'un groupe complexe d'espèces des genres Phaseolus et Vigna (Papilionaceae) sur la base données morphologiques et polliniques, traitées par l'analyse informatique. Boissiera 28:137.
- Markle, G. M. et al., eds. Food and feed crops of the United States, ed. 2. 1998
- McVaugh, R. Flora Novo-Galiciana. 1983-
- Mun-Chan, B. et al. 1986. A checklist of the Korean cultivated plants. Kulturpflanze 34:116.
- National Academy of Sciences. Tropical legumes: resources for the future. 1979
- Porcher, M. H. et al. Searchable World Wide Web Multilingual Multiscript Plant Name Database (MMPND) (on-line resource). http://www.plantnames.unimelb.edu.au/Sorting/Frontpage.html
- Rehm, S. Multilingual dictionary of agronomic plants. 1994
- Schmit, V. et al. 1993. Use of chloroplast DNA polymorphisms for the phylogenetic study of seven Phaseolus taxa including P. vulgaris and P. coccineus. Theor. Appl. Genet. 87:506-516. http://link.springer.com/journal/volumesAndIssues/122
- Spataro, G. et al. 2011. Genetic diversity and structure of a worlwide collection of Phaseolus coccineus L.. Theor. Appl. Genet. 122:1281-1291. Note: it recognized this species as the third most economically important Phaseolus bean; it commented that in this outbreeding species "gene flow between wild and domesticated forms living nearby probably makes the domestication bottleneck less restricted than that which occurred in P. vulgaris"
- Standley, P. C. & J. A. Steyermark. Flora of Guatemala. 1946-1976
- Tutin, T. G. et al., eds. Flora europaea. 1964-1980 Note: cultivated
- Vibrans, H., ed. Malezas de México (on-line resource). Note: http://www.conabio.gob.mx/malezasdemexico/fabaceae/phaseolus-coccineus/fichas/pagina1.htm
- Walker, E. Flora of Okinawa and the southern Ryukyu Islands. 1976
- Woodson, R. E. & R. W. Schery, eds. Flora of Panama. 1943-1980
- Wu Zheng-yi & P. H. Raven et al., eds. Flora of China (English edition). 1994- http://www.efloras.org/browse.aspx?flora_id=2
- Federal Seed Act and Regulations, Agricultural and Vegetable Kind Lists, United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Marketing Service, Seed Regulatory and Testing Branch. 1998 http://www.ams.usda.gov/AMSv1.0/ams.fetchTemplateData.do?template=TemplateI&navID=Publications&rightNav1=Publications&topNav=&leftNav=FairTradingRegulations&page=SeedTestingPublications&resultType=&acct=lsgeninfo
- PROTABASE, the information base of PROTA (Plant Resources of Tropical Africa) (on-line resource). http://www.prota4u.info/
Common names
English
multiflora bean – runner bean – scarlet runner bean – French
haricot d'Espagne – German
Feuerbohne – Italian
fagiolo die Spagna – Japanese Rōmaji
hana-sasage – Portuguese (Brazil)
feijão-da-Espanha – feijão-trepador – Spanish
cubá – judía encarnada – judía pinta – pilay – Swedish
rosenböna – Transcribed Chinese
he bao dou – Transcribed Korean
bulgeungangnamkong –
Distribution
order_code | Status | Continent | Subcontinent | Country | State | Note |
1 | Native | Northern America | Northern Mexico | Mexico | Chihuahua | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Northern Mexico | Mexico | Durango | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Northern Mexico | Mexico | Nuevo Leon | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Northern Mexico | Mexico | San Luis Potosi | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Northern Mexico | Mexico | Sinaloa | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Northern Mexico | Mexico | Tamaulipas | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Northern Mexico | Mexico | Zacatecas | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Chiapas | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Federal District | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Guanajuato | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Guerrero | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Hidalgo | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Jalisco | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Mexico | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Michoacan | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Morelos | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Nayarit | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Oaxaca | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Puebla | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Queretaro | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Tlaxcala | |
1 | Native | Northern America | Southern Mexico | Mexico | Veracruz | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Costa Rica | Alajuela | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | El Salvador | Chalatenango | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Guatemala | Chimaltenango | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Guatemala | Escuintla | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Guatemala | Guatemala | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Guatemala | Huehuetenango | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Guatemala | Jalapa | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Guatemala | Jutiapa | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Guatemala | Quezaltenango | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Guatemala | Sacatepequez | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Guatemala | San Marcos | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Guatemala | Solola | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Guatemala | Suchitepequez | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Guatemala | Zacapa | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Honduras | Francisco Morazan | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Nicaragua | Jinotega | |
1 | Native | Southern America | Mesoamerica | Nicaragua | Matagalpa | |
2 | Cultivated | | | | | widely cult. |
Native
Northern America
-
NORTHERN MEXICO:
Mexico [Chihuahua, Durango, Nuevo Leon, San Luis Potosi, Sinaloa, Tamaulipas, Zacatecas]
-
SOUTHERN MEXICO:
Mexico [Chiapas, Federal District, Guanajuato, Guerrero, Hidalgo, Jalisco, Mexico, Michoacan, Morelos, Nayarit, Oaxaca, Puebla, Queretaro, Tlaxcala, Veracruz]
Southern America
-
MESOAMERICA:
Costa Rica [Alajuela], Guatemala [Escuintla, Guatemala, Huehuetenango, Jalapa, Jutiapa, Zacapa, Chimaltenango, Quezaltenango, Sacatepequez, San Marcos, Solola, Suchitepequez], Honduras [Francisco Morazan], Nicaragua [Jinotega, Matagalpa], El Salvador [Chalatenango]
Cultivated
(widely cult.)
Economic Uses
Vertebrate poisons