Lupinus

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Lupinus
Lupinus field, St. John's, Newfoundland.jpg
Large-leaved lupine (Lupinus polyphyllus)
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Fabales
Family: Fabaceae
Subfamily: Faboideae
Tribe: Genisteae
Genus: Lupinus
L.
Type species
Lupinus albus
L.
Subgenera
  • Lupinus
  • Platycarpos (S.Wats) Kurl.

Lupinus, commonly known as lupin, lupine, [note 1] or regionally bluebonnet, is a genus of plants in the legume family Fabaceae. The genus includes over 199 species, with centers of diversity in North and South America. [1] Smaller centers occur in North Africa and the Mediterranean. [1] [2] They are widely cultivated, both as a food source and as ornamental plants, but are invasive to some areas.

Contents

Description

The species are mostly herbaceous perennial plants 0.3–1.5 metres (1–5 feet) tall, but some are annual plants and a few are shrubs up to 3 m (10 ft) tall. An exception is the chamis de monte ( Lupinus jaimehintonianus ) of Oaxaca in Mexico, which is a tree up to 8 m (26 ft) tall. [3]

Lupins have soft green to grey-green leaves which may be coated in silvery hairs, often densely so. The leaf blades are usually palmately divided into five to 28 leaflets, or reduced to a single leaflet in a few species of the southeastern United States and eastern South America. [4]

The flowers are produced in dense or open whorls on an erect spike, each flower 1–2 centimetres (3834 inch) long. The pea-like flowers have an upper standard, or banner, two lateral wings, and two lower petals fused into a keel. The flower shape has inspired common names such as bluebonnets and quaker bonnets.

The fruit is a pod containing several seeds. The seeds contain alkaloids which lend them a bitter taste.

Taxonomy

The genus Lupinus L. and, in particular, its North American species were divided by Sereno Watson (1873) into three sections: Lupinus, Platycarpos, and Lupinnelus. Differences in habitat and in the number of ovules were the basis for this classification. A majority of the perennial and annual species from the American continent described by Watson were referred to Lupinus. Some annual species with two ovules in the ovary and two seeds in the pod (L. densiflorus, L. microcarpus, etc.) were attributed to the Platycarpos section. Section Lupinnelus consisted of one species (L. uncialis), with axillary and solitary flowers, scarcely reflexed banner, and also with two ovules in the ovary.

While Watson's work was predominantly based on study of North American species, the later research of Ascherson and Graebner (1907) extended his principle of classification to cover all lupins from the Eastern and Western Hemispheres, also using number of ovules (seedbuds) in the ovary (and thus of seeds in the pod) as the criterion for this division. They described two subgenera, Eulupinus and Platycarpos. Most of the described species were referred to subgen. A. Eulupinus. Subgen. B. Platycarpos included several annual species from the Eastern Hemisphere with two seedbuds and seeds in the bean (the same species, as the one specified by S. Watson).

A current schema retains this distinction, but uses the nomenclature for the subgenera of Platycarpos and Lupinus. In this schema, subgenus Platycarpos (S.Wats.) Kurl. contains perennial and annual species from the Western Hemisphere, with a minimum two or more ovules or seedbuds. Subgenus Lupinus consists of 12 species from Africa and the Mediterranean, with a minimum of four ovules or seedbuds. [5]

The taxonomy of Lupinus has always been confusing. How many distinct species exist or how they might be organized within the genus is not clear. The plants are variable and the taxa are not always distinct from one another. Some American taxa have been described as complexes rather than separate species. [6] Estimates of the number of lupine species generally fall between 200 and 500. [2] One authority places the estimate at approximately 267 species worldwide. [1] Currently, two subgenera are recognized.

Subgenus Platycarpos

The ovary contains two and more ovules or seedbuds. The seed are predominantly small-sized, with an underdeveloped embryo and small amount of endosperm. Cotyledons are small-sized, with long caulicles. The first pair of true leaves is alternate. The stem is predominantly naked with waxen coating. Dominating is the monopodial type of branching. Leaflets are smooth, with waxen coating or slight pubescence, predominantly narrow. Pods are flat or orbicular, with two or more seeds. Represented by frutcuilose, fruticose and herbaceous perennial forms, or less often annual ones. Plants are cross-pollinated. Chromosome number 2n is either 36, 48, or 96. [7] This subgenus is distributed throughout North, Central and South America, predominantly in the mining systems of the Andes and Cordillera. Some species are cultivated (L. mutabilis, L. polyphyllus). This subgenus includes several hundred species, requiring further analysis of their authenticity.

It comprises the following species: [8] [9] [10]

Subgenus Lupinus

In its current circumscription, [7] subgenus Lupinus includes 12 species from the Mediterranean region and Africa with at least four ovules or seedbuds in the ovary:

  • Lupinus albus L. 1753 – white lupine
    • subsp. albusL.
    • subsp. graecus(Boiss. & Spruner) Franco & P.Silva
    • subsp. termis(Forsk.) Ponert.
  • Lupinus angustifolius L. 1753 – blue lupin, narrow-leafed lupin
    • var. angustifoliusL.
    • var. albopunctatus Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. griseomaculatus Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. chalybens Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. corylinus Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. purpureus Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. rubidus Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. atabekovae Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. sparsiusculus Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. brunneus Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. albosyringeusTaran.
    • var. albidus Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. candidusKuptzov. et Kurl.
  • Lupinus atlanticus Gladstones 1974
  • Lupinus cosentinii Guss. 1828 – sandplain lupin
  • Lupinus digitatus Forsk. 1775 [40]
  • Lupinus hispanicus Boiss. & Reut. 1842
    • subsp. bicolor(Merino) Gladst.
    • subsp. hispanicusBoiss. & Reut.
  • Lupinus luteus L. 1753 – yellow lupin
    • var. luteusL.
    • var. maculosus Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. kazimierskii Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. arcellus Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. sempolovskii(Atab) Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. melanospermusKurl. et Stankev.
    • var. nigerKurl. et Stankev.
    • var. cremeusKurl. et Stankev.
    • var. leucospermusKurl. et Stankev.
    • var. sulphureus(Atab.) Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. stepanovaeKurl. et Stankev.
    • var. ochroleucusKurl. et Stankev.
    • var. aurantiacusKurl. et Stankev.
    • var. croceusKurl. et Stankev.
    • var. aureusKurl. et Stankev.
    • var. albicans Kurl. et Stankev.
    • var. sinskayae Kurl. et Stankev.
  • Lupinus micranthus Guss. 1828
  • Lupinus palaestinus Boiss. 1849 – white-grey lupine
  • Lupinus pilosus Murr. 1774 – blue lupine
  • Lupinus princei Harms 1901
  • Lupinus somaliensis Baker f. 1895

Species names with uncertain taxonomic status

The status of the following binomials is unresolved: [10]

  • Lupinus acaulis Larrañaga
  • Lupinus achilleaphilusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus acutilobusA.Heller
  • Lupinus aegr-AoviumC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus africanusLour.
  • Lupinus agninusGand.
  • Lupinus agropyrophilusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus alaimandusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus albicaulisDouglas ex Hook.
  • Lupinus alicanescensC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus aliclementinusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus aliumbellatusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus altissimusSessé & Moc.
  • Lupinus alturasensisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus alveorumC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus amabilisA.Heller
  • Lupinus amniculi-cerviC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus amniculi-salicisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus amniculi-vulpumC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus andersonianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus anemophilusGreene
  • Lupinus angustifoliusBlanco
  • Lupinus aphronorusBlank.
  • Lupinus apodotropisA.Heller
  • Lupinus aralloiusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus arborescensAmabekova & Maisuran
  • Lupinus arceuthinusGreene
  • Lupinus argyraeusDC.
  • Lupinus atacamicusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus aureusJ.Agardh
  • Lupinus axillarisBlank.
  • Lupinus barkeriaeKnowles & Westc.
  • Lupinus bartolomeiM.E.Jones
  • Lupinus bassett-maguireiC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus beaneanusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus biddleiiL.F.Hend.
  • Lupinus bimaculatusHook. ex D.Don
  • Lupinus bimaculatusDesr.
  • Lupinus bivoniiC.Presl
  • Lupinus blankinshipiiA.Heller
  • Lupinus blaschkeanusFisch. & C.A.Mey.
  • Lupinus brevior(Jeps.) J.A. Christian & D.B. Dunn
  • Lupinus brittoniiAbrams
  • Lupinus caespitosusNutt.
  • Lupinus californicusK.Koch
  • Lupinus campbelliaeEastw.
  • Lupinus campestrisCham. & Schltdl.
  • Lupinus campestris-florumC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus candicansRydb.
  • Lupinus canusHemsl.
  • Lupinus capitatusGreene
  • Lupinus capitis-amniculiC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus carolus-bucariiC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus chachasOchoa ex C. P. Smith
  • Lupinus chamissonisEschscholtz
  • Lupinus chiapensisRose
  • Lupinus chihuahuensisS.Watson
  • Lupinus christianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus chrysomelasCasar.
  • Lupinus clementinusGreene
  • Lupinus comatusRydb.
  • Lupinus consentiniiWalp.
  • Lupinus cymb-AegressusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus dasyphyllusGreene
  • Lupinus davisianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus debilisEastw.
  • Lupinus decaschistusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus diaboli-septemC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus dichrousGreene
  • Lupinus dispersusA.Heller
  • Lupinus dissimulansC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus durangensisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus eatonanusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus equi-coeliC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus equi-collisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus erectusL.F.Hend.
  • Lupinus erminensS.Watson
  • Lupinus ermineusS.Watson
  • Lupinus falciferNutt.
  • Lupinus falsoerectusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus falsoformosusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus falsograyiC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus fieldiiRose ex J. F. Macbr.
  • Lupinus filicaulisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus finitusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus flavescensRydb.
  • Lupinus foliosusHook.
  • Lupinus foliosusNutt.
  • Lupinus forskahleiBoiss.
  • Lupinus franciscanusGreene
  • Lupinus fraxinetorumGreene
  • Lupinus fruticosusSteud.
  • Lupinus fruticosusDum.Cours.
  • Lupinus garcianusBennett & Dunn
  • Lupinus geophilusRose
  • Lupinus geraniophilusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus glabellusM.Martens & Galeotti
  • Lupinus graciliflorusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus gratusGreene
  • Lupinus gredensisGand.
  • Lupinus guadalupensisGreene
  • Lupinus guadiloupensisSteud.
  • Lupinus guatimalensisauct.
  • Lupinus gussoneanusJ.Agardh
  • Lupinus habrocomusGreene
  • Lupinus haudcytisoidesC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus helleriGreene
  • Lupinus hexaedrusE. Fourn.
  • Lupinus hintoniiC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus huigrensisRose ex C.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus humicolusA.Nelson
  • Lupinus humifususBenth.
  • Lupinus humilisRose ex Pittier
  • Lupinus hyacinthinusGreene
  • Lupinus idoneusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus inamoenusGreene ex C.F.Baker
  • Lupinus indutusGreene ex C.F.Baker
  • Lupinus insignisGlaz. ex C. P. Smith
  • Lupinus integrifoliusL.
  • Lupinus intergrifoliusDesr.
  • Lupinus ione-grisetaeC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus ione-walkeraeC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus jamesonianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus javanicusBurm.f.
  • Lupinus jorgensenanusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus jucundusGreene
  • Lupinus kellerrnanianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus kyleanusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus labiatusNutt.
  • Lupinus lacticolorTamayo
  • Lupinus lacus-huntingtoniiC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus lacuum-trinitatumC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus larsonanusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus lassenensisEastw.
  • Lupinus latissimusGreene
  • Lupinus laxifoliusA.Gray
  • Lupinus leptostachyusGreene
  • Lupinus lesueuriiStandl.
  • Lupinus linearifolius Larrañaga
  • Lupinus lingulaeC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus longilabrumC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus lorentzianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus louise-bucariaeC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus louise-grisetaeC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus lucidusBenth. ex Loudon
  • Lupinus lyman-bensoniiC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus lysichitophilusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus macrocarpusHook. & Arn.
  • Lupinus macrocarpusTorr.
  • Lupinus macrophyllusBenth.
  • Lupinus macrorhizosGeorgi
  • Lupinus magnistipulatusPlanchuelo & Dunn
  • Lupinus maissurianiiAtabek. & Polukhina
  • Lupinus marcusianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus mariae-josephaeH.Pascual
  • Lupinus markleanusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus marschallianusSweet
  • Lupinus mearnsiiC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus meli-campestrisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus meridanusMoritz ex C. P. Smith
  • Lupinus mexiaeC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus micensisM.E.Jones
  • Lupinus micheneriGreene
  • Lupinus milleriJ.Agardh
  • Lupinus minearanusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus minutissimusTamayo
  • Lupinus molleA.Heller
  • Lupinus mollissifoliusDavidson
  • Lupinus monettianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus muellerianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus multicincinnisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus neglectusRose
  • Lupinus nemoralisGreene
  • Lupinus nigerWehmer
  • Lupinus noldekaeEastw.
  • Lupinus nutcanusSpreng.
  • Lupinus nutkatensisJ.G.Cooper
  • Lupinus obtunsusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus octablomusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus opsianthusAmabekova & Maisuran
  • Lupinus pavonumC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus pendeltoniiA.Heller
  • Lupinus pendletoniiA.Heller
  • Lupinus perconfertusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus perplexusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus philistaeusBoiss.
  • Lupinus pinus-contortaeC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus piperiB.L.Rob. ex Piper
  • Lupinus piperitusDavidson
  • Lupinus platanophilusM.E.Jones
  • Lupinus plebeiusGreene ex C.F.Baker
  • Lupinus prato-lacuumC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus proliferDesr.
  • Lupinus propinquusGreene
  • Lupinus proteanusEastw.
  • Lupinus psoraleoidesPollard
  • Lupinus pumviridisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus puroviridisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus purpurascensA.Heller
  • Lupinus pygmaeusTamayo
  • Lupinus quercus-jugiC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus quercuumC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus rainierensisEastw.
  • Lupinus regiusRudolph ex Torr. & A.Gray
  • Lupinus rhodanthusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus rickeriC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus rivetianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus rydbergiiBlank.
  • Lupinus sabuliC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus salicisociusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus salinensisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus sativusGaterau
  • Lupinus scaposusRydb.
  • Lupinus scheuberaeRydb.
  • Lupinus schickendantziiC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus schiedeanusSteud.
  • Lupinus schumanniiC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus seclususC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus semiaequusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus semiverticillatusDesr.
  • Lupinus sergentiTamayo ex Pittier
  • Lupinus sergentiiTamayo
  • Lupinus serradentumC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus shreveiC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus sierrae-zentaeC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus sileriS.Watson
  • Lupinus sinus-meyersiiC.P. Sm.
  • Lupinus sparhawkianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus spatulata Larrañaga
  • Lupinus speciosusVoss
  • Lupinus spruceanusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus standleyensisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus stationisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus stiveriKellogg
  • Lupinus stoloniferusL.
  • Lupinus strigulosusGand.
  • Lupinus subhirsutusDavidson
  • Lupinus subvolutusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus suksdorfiiB.L. Rob. ex Piper
  • Lupinus summersianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus sylvaticusHemsl.
  • Lupinus thermisGasp.
  • Lupinus thermusSt.-Lag.
  • Lupinus tilcaricusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus timotensisTamayo
  • Lupinus tricolorGreene
  • Lupinus tricolorG.Nicholson
  • Lupinus trifidusTorr. ex S.Watson
  • Lupinus tristisSweet
  • Lupinus trochophyllusHoffmanns.
  • Lupinus tuckeranusC.P. Sm.
  • Lupinus vaginansBenth.
  • Lupinus valdepallidusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus vandykeaeEastw.
  • Lupinus variegatusA.Heller
  • Lupinus variegatusPoir.
  • Lupinus varneranusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus vaviloviiAtabekova & Maissurjan
  • Lupinus venustusBailly
  • Lupinus violaceusA.Heller
  • Lupinus viridicalyxC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus volcanicusGreene
  • Lupinus watsoniiA.Heller
  • Lupinus westianaSmall
  • Lupinus wolfianusC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus yanlyensisC.P.Sm.
  • Lupinus yaruahensisC.P.Sm.

Hybrids

The following hybrids have been described: [10]

Etymology

While some sources believe the origin of the name to be in doubt, the Collins Dictionary definition asserts that the word is 14th century in origin, from the Latin lupīnus "wolfish" from lupus "wolf" [41] as it was believed that the plant ravenously exhausted the soil. [42] But a more likely explanation is that lupinus meant that the plants were as dangerous to livestock as wolves, because the alkaloid poisons of Lupines can sicken or kill grazing animals, especially sheep. Farmers have known since ancient Rome [43] that lupines improve soil by adding nitrogen and loosening compacted earth with their strong root systems, so the Collins explanation is improbable.

Ecology

Canadian tiger swallowtail on wild perennial lupine, Gatineau, Quebec Canadian Tiger Swallowtail on Wild Lupine.jpg
Canadian tiger swallowtail on wild perennial lupine, Gatineau, Quebec

Certain species, such as the yellow bush lupin (L. arboreus), are considered invasive weeds when they appear outside their native ranges. In New Zealand, lupines are viewed as invasive and a severe threat in some cases. [44] L. polyphyllus has escaped into the wild and grows in large numbers along main roads and streams on the South Island. A similar spread of the species has occurred in Sweden, Finland and Norway after the non-native species was first deliberately planted in the landscaping along the main roads.[ citation needed ] Lupins have been planted in some parts of Australia with a considerably cooler climate, particularly in rural Victoria and New South Wales.

Lupins are important larval food plants for many lepidopterans (butterflies and moths). These include:

Cultivation

Lupinus polyphyllus , the garden lupin, and Lupinus arboreus , the tree lupin, are popular ornamental plants in gardens, and are the source of numerous hybrids and cultivars in a wide range of colours, including bicolors. As legumes, lupins are good companion plants in gardens, increasing the soil nitrogen for vegetables and other plants. As well as growing in the ground, lupins can do well in pots on balconies or patios. [52]

Agriculture

Like other legumes, lupines can fix nitrogen from the atmosphere [53] into ammonia via a rhizobiumroot nodule symbiosis, fertilizing the soil for other plants. This adaptation allows lupins to be tolerant of infertile soils and capable of pioneering change in barren and poor-quality soils. The genus Lupinus is nodulated by Bradyrhizobium soil bacteria. [5]

In the early 20th century, German scientists attempted to cultivate a sweet variety of lupin lacking the bitter taste, making it more suitable for both human and animal consumption. [54]

Many annual species of lupins are used in agriculture and most of them have Mediterranean origin. [55] While originally cultivated as a green manure or forage, lupins are increasingly grown for their seeds, which can be used as an alternative to soybeans. Sweet (low alkaloid) lupins are highly regarded as a stock feed, particularly for ruminants, but also for pigs and poultry and more recently as an ingredient in aqua-feeds. Three Mediterranean species of lupin, blue (narrow-leafed) lupin, white lupin, and yellow lupin, are widely cultivated for livestock and poultry feed.

The market for lupin seeds for human food is currently small, but researchers believe it has great potential. Lupin seeds are considered "superior" to soybeans in certain applications and evidence is increasing for their potential health benefits. They contain similar protein to soybean, but less fat. As a food source, they are gluten-free and high in dietary fiber, amino acids, and antioxidants, and they are considered to be prebiotic.[ citation needed ]

About 85% of the world's lupin seeds are grown in Western Australia. [56]

Toxicity

Some lupins contain certain secondary compounds, including isoflavones and toxic alkaloids, [53] such as lupinine, anagyrine and sparteine. With early detection, these can be removed through processing, although lupins containing these elements are not usually selected for food-grade products.

A risk of lupin allergy exists in patients allergic to peanuts. [57] Most lupin reactions reported have been in people with peanut allergy. [58] Because of the cross-allergenicity of peanut and lupin, the European Commission, as of 2006, has required that food labels indicate the presence of "lupin and products thereof" in food. [59]

Lupin plants can be colonized by the fungus Diaporthe toxica [60] which can cause a mycotoxicosis known as lupinosis when ingested by grazing animals.

Uses

The legume seeds of lupins, commonly called lupin beans, were popular with the Romans, who cultivated the plants throughout the Roman Empire where the lupin is still known in extant Romance languages by names such as lupini.

Seeds of various species of lupins have been used as a food for over 3,000 years around the Mediterranean [61] and for as long as 6,000 years in the Andes. [62] Lupins were also used by many Native American peoples of North America such as the Yavapai. The Andean lupin or tarwi ( Lupinus mutabilis ) was a widespread food in the Incan Empire; but they have never been accorded the same status as soybeans, dry peas and other pulse crops. The pearl lupin of the Andean highlands of South America, L. mutabilis, known locally as tarwi or chocho, was extensively cultivated, but no conscious genetic improvement other than to select for larger and water-permeable seeds seems to have been made. Users soaked the seed in running water to remove most of the bitter alkaloids and then cooked or toasted the seeds to make them edible, [63] [ full citation needed ] or else boiled and dried them to make kirku, [62] reported as a pre-Columbian practice in Las Relaciones geográficas de Indias . [64] Spanish domination led to a change in the eating habits of the indigenous peoples, and only recently [65] (late 20th century onward) has interest in using lupins as a food been renewed. [66] [61] :353

Lupinus angustifolius Lupinus angustifolius (1).jpg
Lupinus angustifolius

Lupins can be used to make a variety of foods both sweet and savoury, including everyday meals, traditional fermented foods, baked foods, and sauces. The European white lupin ( L. albus ) beans are commonly sold in a salty solution in jars (like olives and pickles) and can be eaten with or without the skin. Lupini dishes are most commonly found in Europe, especially in Portugal, Spain, Greece, and Italy. They are also common in Brazil and Egypt. In Egypt, the lupin is known in Arabic as ترمسtermes, and is a popular street snack after being treated with several soakings of water, and then brined. In Portugal, Spain, and the Spanish Harlem district of New York, they are consumed with beer and wine. In Lebanon, Palestine, Israel, Jordan, and Syria the salty and chilled lupini beans are called turmus (in Arabic : تُرمُس, Hebrew : תורמוס) and are served as part of an apéritif or a snack. Other species, such as L. albus (white lupin), L. angustifolius (narrow-leafed lupin), [67] and L. hirsutus (blue lupin) [68] also have edible seeds. [69]

Culture

Lupinus pilosus in Tel Aviv University, Israel Lupinus-pilosus-2015-Zachi-Evenor-cropped01.jpg
Lupinus pilosus in Tel Aviv University, Israel

Consumed throughout the Mediterranean region and the Andean mountains, lupins were eaten by the early Egyptian and pre-Incan people and were known to Roman agriculturalists for their ability to improve the fertility of soils. [70]

In the late 18th century, lupins were introduced into northern Europe as a means of improving soil quality, and by the 1860s, the garden yellow lupin was seen across the sandy soils of the Baltic coastal plain.

The successful development of lupin varieties with the necessary "sweet gene" paved the way for the greater adoption of lupins across Europe and later Australia.[ citation needed ]

Further work carried out by the Western Australian Department of Agriculture and Food during the 1950s and '60s led to more sweet lupin crops produced in Western Australia now than anywhere else in the world.[ citation needed ]

Bluebonnets, including the Texas bluebonnet (L. texensis), are the state flowers of Texas.

See also

Notes

  1. Both pronounced /ˈlpɪn/ ; the latter spelling is prevalent in North America.

Related Research Articles

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Sophora is a genus of about 45 species of small trees and shrubs in the pea family Fabaceae. The species have a pantropical distribution. The generic name is derived from sophera, an Arabic name for a pea-flowered tree.

<i>Indigofera</i> Genus of plants

Indigofera is a large genus of over 750 species of flowering plants belonging to the pea family Fabaceae. They are widely distributed throughout the tropical and subtropical regions of the world.

<i>Lupinus nanus</i> Species of legume

Lupinus nanus, the sky lupine, field lupine, dwarf lupin, ocean-blue lupine or Douglas' annual lupine, is a species of lupine native to the western United States. It is found natively in California, Nevada, and on Steens Mountain in eastern Oregon. It tends to grow on slopes and in open or disturbed areas below 1300 meters.

<i>Lupinus albus</i> Species of edible plant

Lupinus albus, commonly known as the white lupin or field lupine, is a member of the genus Lupinus in the family Fabaceae. It is a traditional pulse cultivated in the Mediterranean region.

<i>Gilia</i> Genus of flowering plants

Gilia is a genus of flowering plants in the Polemoniaceae family and is related to phlox. It includes 39 species native to the Americas, ranging from British Columbia to Texas and northern Mexico, and to Ohio, in North America, and from Ecuador and Peru to southern Chile and Argentina in South America. These Western native plants are best sown in sunny, well-draining soil in the temperate and tropical regions of the Americas, where they occur mainly in desert or semi-desert habitats

<i>Dalea</i> Genus of legumes

Dalea is a genus of flowering plants in the legume family, Fabaceae. Members of the genus are commonly known as prairie clover or indigo bush. Its name honors English apothecary Samuel Dale (1659–1739). They are native to the Western hemisphere, where they are distributed from Canada to Argentina. Nearly half of the known species are endemic to Mexico. Two species of Dalea have been considered for rangeland restoration.

<i>Acmispon dendroideus</i> Species of legume

Acmispon dendroideus, synonym Syrmatium veatchii, is a species of legume native to California. It is known by the common name island broom. It is endemic to the Channel Islands of California, where it grows on coastal bluffs and cliffs. It is a spreading perennial herb or erect shrub approaching 2 meters in height. It is hairless to hairy and gray-green in color. The branches lined with leaves each made up of a few oval leaflike leaflets up to 1.5 centimeters long each. The inflorescence bears up to 10 yellow pealike flowers, each roughly a centimeter long and fading red as they age.

<i>Lupinus padre-crowleyi</i> Species of legume, classified 1945

Lupinus padre-crowleyi is a rare species of lupine known by the common names Father Crowley's lupine and DeDecker's lupine. It is endemic to California, where it is known only from the eastern slopes of the Sierra Nevada and the high plateau below along the western border of Inyo County. It grows in the granite soils of the mountain forests and scrub. It has been noted at fewer than 20 locations. This is a perennial herb growing an erect inflorescence from a mat of silvery, woolly-haired herbage, reaching maximum heights over half a meter. Each palmate leaf is made up of 6 to 9 leaflets up to 7.5 centimeters long. The inflorescence is a raceme of whorled flowers each just over a centimeter long. The flower is cream to pale brownish yellow in color. The fruit is a silky-haired legume pod containing black-mottled white seeds.

<i>Acmispon</i> Genus of legumes

Acmispon is a genus of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae (legumes), native to North America and the west coast of Chile in South America. It includes several species of American bird's-foot trefoils and deervetches formerly contained in the globally distributed genus Lotus. The former genus Syrmatium is included in Acmispon. The Jepson eFlora accepts only Acmispon.

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Boguslav Stanislavovich Kurlovich is a Russian-Finnish scientific agronomist of Polish descent. He specializes in the field of plant genetic resources, botany, plant and fish breeding.

<i>Lupinus <span style="font-style:normal;">subg.</span> Platycarpos</i> Subgenus of legumes

The genus Lupinus L. and, in particular, its North-American species, were divided by Sereno Watson (1873) into three parts: Lupinus, Platycarpos and Lupinnelus. Differences in habit and in the number of ovules were accepted as the basis for this classification. A majority of perennial and annual species from the American continent described by Watson were referred to Lupinus. To the Platycarpos section were attributed some annual species with two ovules in the ovary and two seeds in the pod. The section Lupinnelus consisted of one species, with axillary and solitary flowers, scarcely reflexed banner, and also with two ovules in the ovary.

<i>Calyptridium</i> Genus of flowering plants

Calyptridium is a genus of flowering plants belonging to the family Montiaceae.

<i>Lupinus prunophilus</i> Species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae

Lupinus prunophilus, commonly known as the hairy bigleaf lupine or chokecherry lupin, is a medium-sized herbaceous plant that grows in the Great Basin and other parts of the U.S. interior between the Sierra-Nevada and the Rockies. It is a close relative and very similar to Lupinus polyphyllus and is considered a subspecies by some botanists.

<i>Lupinus caudatus</i> Species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae

Lupinus caudatus is a widespread species of wildflower in genus Lupinus from western North America known by the common names tailcup lupin and spurred lupin. It is distinctive for the short spur on its purple-blue flowers, for which it is named. Because of its wide distribution and toxicity it commonly causes poisonings of susceptible livestock such as horses, cattle, and sheep, though it is eaten without harm by wild herbivores like deer and elk. It is generally found from the Coastal Ranges and Sierra Nevada Mountains in the west to the Rocky Mountains in the east.

References

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  11. Some sources treat Lupinus alpestris as a synonym of Lupinus argenteus.
  12. Some sources treat Lupinus aridorum as a synonym of Lupinus westianus.
  13. Some sources treat Lupinus aridus as a synonym of Lupinus lepidus .
  14. Some sources treat Lupinus attenuatus as a synonym of Lupinus coriaceus.
  15. Some sources treat Lupinus brevicaulis as a synonym of Lupinus grisebachianus.
  16. Some sources treat Lupinus burkei as a synonym of Lupinus polyphyllus.
  17. Some sources treat Lupinus caespitosus as a synonym of Lupinus lepidus.
  18. Some sources treat Lupinus confertus as a synonym of Lupinus lepidus.
  19. Some sources treat Lupinus crassus as a synonym of Lupinus ammophilus.
  20. Some sources treat Lupinus cumulicola as a synonym of Lupinus diffusus.
  21. Some sources treat Lupinus densiflorus as a synonym of Lupinus microcarpus.
  22. Some sources treat Lupinus depressus as a synonym of Lupinus argenteus.
  23. Some sources treat Lupinus hartwegii as a synonym of Lupinus mexicanus.
  24. Some sources treat Lupinus heptaphyllus as a synonym of Lupinus gibertianus.
  25. Some sources treat Lupinus hilarianus as a synonym of Lupinus gibertianus.
  26. Some sources treat Lupinus hillii as a synonym of Lupinus argenteus.
  27. Some sources treat Lupinus luteolus as a synonym of Lupinus luteus.
  28. Some sources treat Lupinus lyallii as a synonym of Lupinus lepidus.
  29. Some sources treat Lupinus matucanicus as a synonym of Lupinus lindleyanus.
  30. Some sources treat Lupinus minimus as a synonym of Lupinus lepidus.
  31. Some sources treat Lupinus montigenus as a synonym of Lupinus argenteus.
  32. Some sources treat Lupinus oreganus as a synonym of Lupinus sulphureus.
  33. Some sources treat Lupinus ornatus as a synonym of Lupinus sericeus.
  34. Some sources treat Lupinus polycarpus as a synonym of Lupinus bicolor.
  35. Some sources treat Lupinus pratensis as a synonym of Lupinus confertus.
  36. Some sources treat Lupinus prunophilus as a synonym of Lupinus polyphyllus.
  37. Some sources treat Lupinus ruber as a synonym of Lupinus microcarpus.
  38. Some sources treat Lupinus sellulus as a synonym of Lupinus lepidus.
  39. Some sources treat Lupinus subvexus as a synonym of Lupinus microcarpus.
  40. Some sources treat Lupinus digitatus as a synonym of Lupinus cosentinii.
  41. Lewis, Charlton T.; Short, Charles (1879). "lupīnus". A Latin Dictionary. Perseus Digital Library.
  42. "Lupin definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary".
  43. Tietz, W., & von Minckwitz, M.-C. (2023). Plant Nutrition in the Roman empire. Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science, 186, 479–486. https://doi.org/10.1002/jpln.202300152
  44. White, Mike (3 March 2017). "Lupins: A love-hate story - North & South". Noted. Archived from the original on 21 April 2020. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  45. Mission Blue Butterfly. Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy.
  46. Callophrys irus. Canadian Biodiversity Information Facility.
  47. Erynnis persius. Archived 2 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine Atlas of North Dakota Butterflies. USGS.
  48. Glaucopsyche lygdamus. Archived 2 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine Atlas of North Dakota Butterflies. USGS.
  49. Plebejus melissa. Butterflies and Moths of North America.
  50. Eastern persius duskywing, Ontario Species at Risk
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  53. 1 2 Taylor, Ronald J. (1994) [1992]. Sagebrush Country: A Wildflower Sanctuary (rev. ed.). Missoula, MT: Mountain Press Pub. Co. p. 104. ISBN   0-87842-280-3. OCLC   25708726.
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  55. Langer, R.H.M. & Hill, G.D. 1991. Agricultural Plants, second edition. p 261. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. ISBN   0-521-40545-9
  56. Ross, K. Soy substitute edges its way into European meals. New York Times 16 November 2011.
  57. The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 104(4 Pt. 1), 883-88.
  58. Opinion of the scientific panel on dietetic products, nutrition and allergies on a request from the Commission related to the evaluation of lupin for labelling purposes. The European Food Safety Authority Journal 302 1-11. 2005.
  59. Commission Directive 2006/142/EC of 22 December 2006 amending Annex IIIa of Directive 2000/13/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council listing the ingredients which must under all circumstances appear on the labeling of foodstuffs.
  60. Williamson et al. (1994) Diaporthe toxica sp. nov., The cause of lupinosis in sheep. Mycological Research, 98 (12): 1367
  61. 1 2 Gladstone, J. S.; Atkins, C. A.; Hamblin, J., eds. (1998). Lupins as Crop Plants: Biology, Production and Utilization. CAB International. ISBN   9780851992242.
  62. 1 2 Uauy, Ricardo; Gattas, Vivien; Yañez, Enrique (1995). "Sweet Lupins in Human Nutrition". Plants in Human Nutrition. World Review of Nutrition and Dietetics. 77: 75–88. doi:10.1159/000424466. ISBN   978-3-8055-6101-3. PMID   7732701.
  63. (Hill, 1977; Aguilera and Truer, 1978)
  64. López-Bellido, Luis; Fuentes, M (1986). Lupin crop as an alternative source of protein. Vol. 40. pp. 239–295 (at page 241). doi:10.1016/S0065-2113(08)60284-9. ISBN   9780080563534.{{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  65. Sweetingham, Mark; Kingwell, Ross (2008). "LUPINS – REFLECTIONS AND FUTURE POSSIBILITIES". 12th International Lupin Conference; Fremantle, Western Australia.
  66. (Hill, 1977).
  67. Murcia, J. and I. Hoyos. (1998). 'Características y applicaciones de las plantas: Altramuz Azul (Lupinus angustifolius). [in Spanish]. Accessed 3 August 2013.
  68. Hedrick, U. P. (ed.) Sturtevant's Edible Plants of the World . 1919. 387-88.
  69. Fionnuala Fallon (5 January 2019). "Pink dandelions, cucamelons, edible lupins: seeds to plant now for a delicious summer". The Irish Times. Retrieved 22 April 2019.
  70. Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lupine"  . Encyclopædia Britannica . Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 127.

Further reading