Taxon:
Lupinus albus L. var. albus
Summary
Verified:
06/30/1988
ARS Systematic Botanists.
Autonyms (not in current use), synonyms and invalid designations
Reference(s)
- Davis, P. H., ed. Flora of Turkey and the east Aegean islands. 1965-1988 Note: = L. albus subsp. albus
- Gladstones, J. S. 1974. Lupins of the Mediterranean region and Africa. Techn. Bull. Dept. Agric. Western Australia 26:5.
- Markle, G. M. et al., eds. Food and feed crops of the United States, ed. 2. 1998
- 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
- Sawicka-Sienkiewicz, E. et al. 2008. Difficulties with interspecific hybridisation in the genus Lupinus. Proceedings of the 12th International Lupin Conference. Canterbury, New Zealand. 2008. 135-142. Note: this study observed that successful crosses have been obtained among Old World species of different chromosome number, while for New World species had happened among species of similar chromosome number; it also discussed the use of hybrids derived from crosses between female Lupinus albus var. albus (as L. termis) and L. mutabilis for breeding purposes in domesticated lupins
- Scoppola, A. et al. 2011. Lupinus sect. Albus (Fabaceae): Taxonomic criticism and conservation value. The case of wild populations in central Italy. Pl. Biosyst. 145:514-526. Note: as subsp. albus
- Tutin, T. G. et al., eds. Flora europaea, second edition. 1993 Note: online; as subsp. albus
- Tutin, T. G. et al., eds. Flora europaea. 1964-1980 Note: = L. albus subsp. albus
- Walters, S. M. et al., eds. European garden flora. 1986-
- Yakovlev, G. P. et al. Legumes of Northern Eurasia. 1996
Common names
French
lupin blanc – German
weiße Lupine – Portuguese
tremoçeiro-branco – Spanish
altramuz blanco –
Distribution
order_code | Status | Continent | Subcontinent | Country | State | Note |
2 | Cultivated | | | | | widely cult. |
Cultivated
(widely cult.)
Economic Uses
Animal food
Environmental
ornamental (fide Food Feed Crops US) –