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Vicia cassubica
Species of plant in the genus Vicia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Vicia cassubica, called Kashubian vetch and Danzig vetch, is a species of flowering plant in the genus Vicia. Found in thermophilous oak forests, it also does well in old fields that are in later stages of succession.[3]
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Distribution
Despite its binomial and common name suggesting a connection to the Kashubian region of Poland, the plant species is also native to most of Europe, Turkey, North, Northwest and South European Russia, the Levant, the Caucasus and Iran.[2][4]
Description
Stem
Naked or short-haired, erect or climbing, about 30-60 cm long.
Leaves
Evenly-spaced, composed of 8-12 pairs of elliptic leaflets. Their short and numerous lateral nerves growing at a 45° angle to the main nerve are reticulate. The bracts are entire-edged.
Flowers
Blooms from June to July. Collected in clusters of 5-14 purple-violet butterfly flowers, whose corolla is 12-15 mm long. Their filament is at least as long as a petal. The clusters are shorter than the leaves that grow at an angle.
Fruit
Egg-like pods about 1.5 cm long containing usually 1-2 seeds.
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References
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