- You are here:
 - Full Key
 - All other flowering non-woody plants
 - All other herbaceous, flowering dicots
 - Baptisia bracteata
 
Baptisia bracteata — long-bracted wild indigo
Copyright: various copyright holders. To reuse an image, please click it to see who you will need to contact.
Facts
Long-bracted wild indigo is native to North America, but introduced to New England, probably as rare escapes from cultivation. Its large cream-colored flowers open early in spring and are pollinated chiefly by queen bumblebees after they emerge in search of a new nest site. In New England, long-bracted wild indigo has been collected only in Massachusetts.
Habitat
Anthropogenic (human-disturbed or -maintained habitats), meadows and fields
New England distribution
Adapted from BONAP data
Native: indigenous.
Non-native: introduced (intentionally or unintentionally); has become naturalized.
County documented: documented to exist in the county by evidence (herbarium specimen, photograph). Also covers those considered historical (not seen in 20 years).
State documented: documented to exist in the state, but not documented to a county within the state. Also covers those considered historical (not seen in 20 years).
Note: when native and non-native populations both exist in a county, only native status is shown on the map.
Found this plant? Take a photo and post a sighting.
Characteristics
- Habitat
 - terrestrial
 
- Flower petal color
 - 
                                
                                    
- white
 - yellow
 
 
- Leaf type
 - the leaves are compound (made up of two or more discrete leaflets
 
- Leaf arrangement
 - alternate: there is one leaf per node along the stem
 
- Leaf blade edges
 - the edge of the leaf blade is entire (has no teeth or lobes)
 
- Flower symmetry
 - there is only one way to evenly divide the flower (the flower is bilaterally symmetrical)
 
- Number of sepals, petals or tepals
 - 
                                
                                    
- there are five petals, sepals, or tepals in the flower
 - there are four petals, sepals, or tepals in the flower
 
 
- Fusion of sepals and petals
 - the petals or the sepals are fused into a cup or tube
 
- Stamen number
 - 10
 
- Fruit type (general)
 - the fruit is dry and splits open when ripe
 
- Fruit length
 - 20–50 mm
 
- 
                        
Clonal plantlets
- Bulbils
 - the plant does not appear to have bulbils
 
- Bulblets replace flowers
 - there are no bulblets where the flowers are located
 
 - 
                        
Flowers
- Anther opening
 - the anthers have narrow slits or furrows that run lengthwise along the anthers
 
- Anther spurs
 - the anthers do not have spurs on them
 
- Calyx symmetry
 - there is only one way to evenly divide the calyx (the calyx is bilaterally symmetrical)
 
- Carpels fused
 - 
                                
                                    
- NA
 - the carpel is solitary or (if 2 or more) the carpels are not fused to one another
 
 
- Cleistogamous flowers
 - there are no cleistogamous flowers on the plan
 
- Corolla morphology
 - NA
 
- Corolla palate
 - no
 
- Corona lobe length
 - 0 mm
 
- Epicalyx
 - the flower does not have an epicalyx
 
- Epicalyx number of parts
 - 0
 
- Filament surface
 - the filament is smooth, with no hairs or scales
 
- Flower description
 - the flower has a superior ovary and a hypanthium
 
- Flower number
 - 5–20
 
- Flower orientation
 - the flower bends downwards or hangs downwards
 
- Flower petal color
 - 
                                
                                    
- white
 - yellow
 
 
- Flower reproductive parts
 - the flower has both pollen- and seed-producing parts
 
- Flower symmetry
 - there is only one way to evenly divide the flower (the flower is bilaterally symmetrical)
 
- Flowers sunken into stem
 - no
 
- Form of style
 - the style is narrow at the tip and unbranched
 
- Fringed petal edges
 - the petals are not fringed
 
- Fused stamen clusters
 - NA
 
- Fusion of sepals and petals
 - the petals or the sepals are fused into a cup or tube
 
- Hairs on flower stalk
 - the flower stalk has hairs on it
 
- Hairs on inflorescence
 - the axis of the inflorescence has hairs entirely without glands
 
- Horns in hoods (Asclepias)
 - NA
 
- Hypanthium
 - the flower has a hypanthium
 
- Inflorescence one-sided
 - 
                                
                                    
- the flowers are all or nearly all arrayed on one side of the inflorescence axis or branches of the inflorescence
 - the flowers are arrayed in a spiral around the inflorescence axis or branches, or occur singly, or in several ranks
 
 
- Inner tepals (Rumex)
 - NA
 
- Length of flower stalk
 - 15–40 mm
 
- Nectar spur
 - the flower has no nectar spurs
 
- Number of carpels
 - 1
 
- Number of pistils
 - 1
 
- Number of sepals, petals or tepals
 - 
                                
                                    
- there are five petals, sepals, or tepals in the flower
 - there are four petals, sepals, or tepals in the flower
 
 
- Number of styles
 - 1
 
- Ovary position
 - the ovary is above the point of petal and/or sepal attachment
 
- Petal and sepal arrangement
 - the flower includes two cycles of petal- or sepal-like structures
 
- Petal and sepal colors
 - 
                                
                                    
- white
 - yellow
 
 
- Petal appearance
 - the petals are thin and delicate, and pigmented (colored other than green or brown)
 
- Petal folding in bud
 - 
                                
                                    
- the petals in bud are arranged in a cycle with edges overlapping like roof shingles (imbricate)
 - the petals in bud meet exactly at the margins without overlapping (valvate)
 
 
- Petal folds or pleats
 - 
                                
                                    
- the petals of the flower do not have folds or plaits
 - the petals of the flower have folds or plaits on them
 
 
- Petal hairs (Viola)
 - NA
 
- Petal length
 - 18–23 mm
 
- Petal length relative to sepals
 - the petals are longer than the sepals
 
- Petal number
 - 5
 
- Petal tips (Cuscuta)
 - NA
 
- Raceme attachment (Veronica)
 - NA
 
- Reproductive system
 - all the flowers have both carpels and stamens (synoecious)
 
- Scales inside corolla
 - no
 
- Sepal and petal color
 - the sepals are different from the petals
 
- Sepal appearance
 - the sepals are green or brown, and leaf-like in texture
 
- Sepal appendages
 - the sepals do not have appendages on them
 
- Sepal appendages (Oenothera)
 - NA
 
- Sepal color
 - green to brown
 
- Sepal length
 - 7–10 mm
 
- Sepal number
 - 5
 
- Sepal orientation
 - the sepals are slightly curved outwards from the corolla
 
- Sepal relative length
 - 
                                
                                    
- the sepal lobes are approximately the same length as the fused portion
 - the sepal lobes are shorter than the fused portion
 
 
- Sepal shape
 - the sepal outline is roughly triangular
 
- Sepal texture
 - 
                                
                                    
- the sepals are either very thin but flexible, like a membrane, or they are leaf-like in texture
 - the sepals are fleshy or spongy
 
 
- Sepal tip shape
 - the sepal tip is acute (is sharply pointed)
 
- Sepal uniformity
 - all the sepals are about the same size
 
- Sepals fused only to sepals
 - the sepals are fused to each other (not other flower parts), at least near their bases
 
- Stamen morphology
 - the stamens within each cycle are the same
 
- Stamen number
 - 10
 
- Stamens fused
 - the stamens are not attached to one another
 
- Staminodes
 - there are no staminodes on the flower
 
- Style petal-like
 - the styles are not petal-like
 
- Umbel flower reproductive parts
 - NA
 
- Upper lip of bilabiate corolla
 - NA
 
 - 
                        
Fruits or seeds
- Achene relative orientation
 - NA
 
- Achene shape
 - NA
 
- Achene surface (Polygonum)
 - NA
 
- Achene type
 - NA
 
- Berry color
 - NA
 
- Capsule color (Viola)
 - NA
 
- Capsule ribs
 - NA
 
- Capsule splitting
 - 
                                
                                    
- NA
 - the capsule splits by two main valves, teeth or pores
 
 
- Fruit (pyxis) dehiscence
 - NA
 
- Fruit cross-section
 - the fruit is at least somewhat flattened
 
- Fruit features (Brassicaceae)
 - NA
 
- Fruit length
 - 20–50 mm
 
- Fruit length relative to sepals
 - the fruit is longer than its associated sepals
 
- Fruit locules
 - one
 
- Fruit shape
 - 
                                
                                    
- the fruit is ellipsoid (widest in the middle and tapering to each end)
 - the fruit is flat or strongly compressed
 - the fruit is lanceoloid (narrow, widest below the middle and tapering at both ends)
 - the fruit is spherical
 
 
- Fruit stalk orientation
 - the fruits curve or droop downwards
 
- Fruit type (general)
 - the fruit is dry and splits open when ripe
 
- Fruit type (specific)
 - the fruit is a legume (a fruit that splits into two valves, but only has a single carpel; think of a pea pod)
 
- Fruit width
 - 15–25 mm
 
- Hairs on fruit
 - 
                                
                                    
- the fruits are not hairy
 - the fruits have hairs on them
 
 
- Legumes (Fabaceae)
 - the legume has none of the mentioned special features
 
- Mericarp length
 - 0 mm
 
- Mericarp segment shape (Desmodium)
 - NA
 
- Other markings on berry
 - NA
 
- Ovary stipe
 - the ovary or fruit has a stipe
 
- Ovary stipe length
 - 5–15 mm
 
- Placenta arrangement
 - the plant has parietal placentation, where ovules develop on the wall or slight outgrowths of the wall forming broken partitions within a compound ovary
 
- Rows of seeds in fruit (Brassicaceae)
 - NA
 
- Schizocarpic fruit compression
 - NA
 
- Schizocarpic fruit segments
 - 0
 
- Seed number
 - 15–25
 
- Septum in fruit (Brassicaceae)
 - NA
 
- Wings on fruit
 - the fruit does not have wings on it
 
- prickles on fruits
 - the fruits do not have thorn-like defensive structures
 
 - 
                        
Glands or sap
- Glands on leaf blade
 - the leaf blades do not have glandular dots or scales
 
- Sap
 - the sap is clear and watery
 
- Sap color
 - the sap is clear
 
 - 
                        
Growth form
- Growth form
 - the plant is an herb (it has self-supporting stems)
 
- Lifespan
 - the plant lives more than two years
 
- Parasitism
 - the plant is not parasitic
 
- Plant color
 - the leaves or young stems of the plant are green
 
- Plants darken when dry
 - yes
 
- Spines on plant
 - the plant has no spines
 
- Underground organs
 - 
                                
                                    
- the plant has a caudex (the root mass is firm and hardened at the top)
 - the plant has a rhizome (a horizontal underground stem with roots growing from it)
 
 
 - 
                        
Leaves
- Bracteole edges
 - NA
 
- Bracteole length
 - 0 mm
 
- Bracteole number (Apiaceae)
 - 0
 
- Bracteole shape
 - NA
 
- Bracteoles
 - there are no bracteoles on the plant
 
- Bracts in plantain (Plantago)
 - NA
 
- Final leaf segment length (compound lvs only)
 - 25–90 mm
 
- Final leaf segment length to width ratio (compound lvs only)
 - 1.5–5.5
 
- Floral bract texture
 - the floral bracts are green, with a leaf-like texture
 
- Floral bracts
 - the flower has one or more bracts associated with it
 
- Flower bract length
 - 10–30 mm
 
- Hairs on leaf stalk
 - the petiole has hairs on it
 
- Hairs on underside of leaf
 - the underside of the leaf is fuzzy or hairy
 
- Hairs on upper side of leaf
 - the upper side of the leaf is fuzzy or hairy
 
- Leaf arrangement
 - alternate: there is one leaf per node along the stem
 
- Leaf blade base shape
 - the base of the leaf blade is cuneate (wedge-shaped, tapers to the base with relatively straight, converging edges), or narrow
 
- Leaf blade base symmetry
 - the leaf blade base is symmetrical
 
- Leaf blade edges
 - the edge of the leaf blade is entire (has no teeth or lobes)
 
- Leaf blade flatness
 - the leaf is flat (planar) at the edges
 
- Leaf blade hairs
 - the leaf blade has simple hairs with no glands, and not tangled or wooly
 
- Leaf blade primary vein pattern
 - the major veins radiate out from one point at the base
 
- Leaf blade shape
 - 
                                
                                    
- the leaf blade is oblanceolate (lance-shaped, but with the widest point above the middle of the leaf blade)
 - the leaf blade is obovate (egg-shaped, but with the widest point above the middle of the leaf blade)
 
 
- Leaf blade surface colors
 - the upper side of the leaf blade is relatively uniform in color
 
- Leaf blade texture
 - the leaf blade is herbaceous (has a leafy texture)
 
- Leaf blade veins
 - the leaf blade has one main vein running from the base towards the tip (it may or may not have secondary veins)
 
- Leaf duration
 - the leaves drop off in winter (or they whither but persist on the plant)
 
- Leaf form
 - the leaves are green, with an expanded blade and a leaf-like texture
 
- Leaf shiny
 - the upper side of the leaf is dull or slightly shiny
 
- Leaf spines
 - there are no spines on the leaf edges
 
- Leaf stalk
 - the leaves have leaf stalks
 
- Leaf stalk attachment to leaf
 - the petiole attaches at the basal margin of the leaf blade
 
- Leaf stalk base
 - the petiole base is narrow where it attaches to the stem
 
- Leaf stalk length
 - 2–10 mm
 
- Leaf teeth and lobes
 - the edge of the leaf blade is entire (has no teeth or lobes)
 
- Leaf tip
 - the tip of the leaf blade is obtuse (bluntly pointed)
 
- Leaf type
 - the leaves are compound (made up of two or more discrete leaflets
 
- Leaf variation
 - the leaves are nearly similar in size, prominence of teeth, and length of stalks throughout the stem
 
- Leaflet number
 - Up to 3
 
- Leaflet petiolules
 - the leaflets of the compound leaf lack petiolules
 
- Leaves per node
 - there is one leaf per node along the stem
 
- Pinnately compound leaf type
 - the pinnately compound leaves have a terminal leaflet (and usually have an odd number of leaflets per axis)
 
- Specific leaf type
 - the leaf has lobes that radiate from the base, somewhat like a hand
 
- Stipels
 - there are no stipels at the bases of the petiolules
 
- Stipule features
 - NA
 
- Stipule fused to leaf stalk
 - 
                                
                                    
- the stipules are fused to the petioles for some or most of their length
 - the stipules are not fused to the petioles
 
 
- Stipule length
 - 20–40 mm
 
- Stipules
 - the plant has stipules
 
- Teeth per side of leaf blade
 - 0
 
 - 
                        
Place
- Habitat
 - terrestrial
 
- Specific habitat
 - 
                                
                                    
- human-disturbed or -maintained habitats
 - meadows or fields
 
 
 - 
                        
Stem, shoot, branch
- Branched tendrils
 - NA
 
- Hair between stem nodes
 - 
                                
                                    
- the stem has hairs between the nodes
 - the stem has no hairs between the nodes
 
 
- Leaves on stem
 - there is at least one full leaf above the base of the flowering stem
 
- Plant height
 - 20–70 cm
 
- Stem bloom
 - there is no powdery or waxy film on the stem
 
- Stem orientation
 - the stems are upright or angled outwards
 
- Stem spacing
 - the plant is growing in tufts, or compact clusters with closely spaced stems, or it is densely matted together in clumps, cushionlike
 
- Tendril origin
 - NA
 
- Tendrils
 - the plant does not have tendrils
 
- Wings on stem
 - the stem does not have wings on it
 
 
Wetland status
Not classified
In New England
Distribution
- Connecticut
 - absent
 
- Maine
 - absent
 
- Massachusetts
 - present
 
- New Hampshire
 - absent
 
- Rhode Island
 - absent
 
- Vermont
 - absent
 
Conservation status
Exact status definitions can vary from state to state. For details, please check with your state.
var. leucophaea
- Massachusetts
 - not applicable (S-rank: SNA)
 
Subspecies and varieties
Our variety is Baptisia bracteata Muhl. ex Ell. var. leucophaea (Nutt.) Kartesz & Gandhi
From Flora Novae Angliae dichotomous key
2. Baptisia bracteata Muhl. ex Ell. var. leucophaea (Nutt.) Kartesz & Gandhi E
long-bracted wild indigo. Baptisia bracteata Muhl. ex Ell. var. glabrescens (Larisey) Isely; B. leucophaea Nutt.; B. leucophaea Nutt. var. glabrescens Larisey • MA. Fields, roadsides, waste areas.
Native to North America?
Yes and no (some introduced)
Sometimes confused with
- Baptisia tinctoria:
 - racemes with spirally arranged flowers, ascending to erect, with caducous bracts, and stipules small and caducous (vs. B. bracteata, with racemes secund, initially ascending-spreading and becoming declined, with persistent foliaceous bracts, and stipules subfoliaceous, those of the principal leaves 20-40 mm long).
 
Synonyms
- Baptisia bracteata Muhl. ex Ell. var. glabrescens (Larisey) Isely
 - Baptisia leucophaea Nutt.
 - Baptisia leucophaea Nutt. var. glabrescens Larisey