Wednesday's Wildflower: Atlantic Pigeonwings
ATLANTIC PIGEONWINGS, Clitoria mariana L.
Pea Family (Fabaceae)
Submitted by Roger Hammer, Dade Chapter
The upper leaves of
this vining species have 3 ovate to ovate-lanceolate leaflets that reach up to
2½" long and ¾" wide. The violet or pink flowers reach 2" long.
A similar, related, endemic species (Clitoria fragrans) has narrower
leaflets, sweetly fragrant flowers, and is known only from the Lake Wales Ridge
in Lake, Orange, Polk, and Highlands Counties.
Atlantic pigeonwings
blooms in March and continues into October, so look for it in sandhills, scrub,
and forest margins throughout much of mainland Florida. For butterfly
gardeners, it is a larval host plant of the long-tailed skipper, hoary edge,
and southern cloudywing butterflies.
Clitoria alludes to the similarity of the keel of the flower
to a clitoris on female genitalia. When the rather risqué genus was first named
by Carolus Linnaeus (1707–1778) in 1753, he received sharp criticism from other
taxonomists of the time.
The name mariana relates
either to plants with mottled leaves or species from Maryland. In this case, it
was named for Maryland It ranges across the entire eastern United States
westard to Arizona, Kansas, Nebraska, and Minnesota. Other members of the genus
occur in Asia and Madagascar and some have flowers that are used to dye rice
blue, or the flowers are dipped in batter and fried. Clitoria ternatea is
naturalized in Florida from Ternate Island in the Maluka Island chain in
eastern Indonesia and has dark blue flowers. The plant photographed was in
Oscar Scherer State Park in Sarasota County, blooming in March along the nature
trail that leads through the sandhills.
Photo & text: Roger L. Hammer
Roger is a member of the FNPS Dade Chapter and is currently working on a new Falcon Guide titled Complete Guide to Florida Wildflowers, due to be released in Spring 2018. His other wildflower guides include Florida Keys Wildflowers (2004), Everglades Wildflowers (2nd edition, 2014), and Central Florida Wildflowers (2016).
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