Summary[edit] Description: Utah sweetvetch (Hedysarum boreale var. boreale), Pea family (Fabaceae). Hills along the LaSal Loop Road, San Juan County, Utah. Date: 9 May 2015, 07:21. Source: 2015.05.09_07.21.48_IMG_2076. Author: Andrey Zharkikh from Salt Lake City, USA.
Summary[edit] Description: Northern sweetvetch is common in rangeland steppe where disturbance is minimal. It is also common on rocky slopes with loose substrates. In this area, it is least abundant adjacent to the crop fields. Date: 25 June 2020, 04:42. Source: Hedysarum boreale - northern sweetvetch. Author: Matt Lavin from Bozeman, Montana, USA. Camera location46° 03′ 27.53″ N, 109° 11′ 56.34″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 46.057647; -109.198984.
Summary[edit] Description: Utah sweetvetch (Hedysarum boreale var. boreale), Pea family (Fabaceae). Manti-LaSal National Forest near Birdseye, Utah. Date: 20 June 2016, 16:20. Source: 2016.06.20_16.20.24_IMG_6780. Author: Andrey Zharkikh from Salt Lake City, USA.
Description: Regardless of possible roadside plantings, Hedysarum is found roadside in the INL even well off the pavement where is seems to be confined to the two-track roads. Date: 23 June 2010, 07:49. Source: Hedysarum boreale Uploaded by Tim1357. Author: Matt Lavin from Bozeman, Montana, USA. Camera location43° 48′ 03.23″ N, 112° 47′ 57.91″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 43.800897; -112.799420.
Summary[edit] Description: Utah sweetvetch (Hedysarum boreale var. boreale), Pea family (Fabaceae). Manti-LaSal National Forest near Birdseye, Utah. Date: 18 June 2016, 09:33. Source: 2016.06.18_09.33.41_IMG_6712. Author: Andrey Zharkikh from Salt Lake City, USA.
Summary[edit] Description: Utah sweetvetch (Hedysarum boreale var. boreale), Pea family (Fabaceae). One mile south from Duchesne, along Hwy 191, Utah. The stipules are evidently connate, with minor splits at the base. Date: 25 May 2015, 11:52. Source: 2015.05.25_11.52.39_IMG_2376. Author: Andrey Zharkikh from Salt Lake City, USA.
Description: This is an uncommon species within the sagebrush steppe and seems to be most abundant along roads and other moderately disturbed settings. Date: 16 June 2009, 10:46. Source: Hedysarum boreale Uploaded by Jacopo Werther. Author: Matt Lavin from Bozeman, Montana, USA. Camera location43° 35′ 26.34″ N, 112° 43′ 11.79″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 43.590650; -112.719942.
Summary[edit] Description: Northern sweetvetch is common in rangeland steppe where disturbance is minimal. It is also common on rocky slopes with loose substrates. In this area, it is least abundant adjacent to the crop fields. Date: 25 June 2020, 04:42. Source: Hedysarum boreale - northern sweetvetch. Author: Matt Lavin from Bozeman, Montana, USA. Camera location46° 03′ 27.53″ N, 109° 11′ 56.45″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 46.057647; -109.199014.
Description: This is an uncommon species within the sagebrush steppe and seems to be most abundant along roads and other moderately disturbed settings. Date: 16 June 2009, 10:47. Source: Hedysarum boreale Uploaded by Jacopo Werther. Author: Matt Lavin from Bozeman, Montana, USA. Camera location43° 35′ 26.34″ N, 112° 43′ 11.79″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 43.590650; -112.719942.
Summary[edit] Description: Hedysarum boreale, west of Tenderfoot Mesa and southwest of the Dolores River in John Brown Canyon, 38.665 -108.978, Mesa County, Colorado, 18 May 2019. Date: 18 May 2019, 18:16. Source: Hedysarum boreale. Author: Patrick Alexander from Las Cruces, NM.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Hedysarum hedysaroides in Avoriaz, Haute-Savoie, France. Date: 21 June 2020, 11:08:09. Source: Own work. Author: Krzysztof Golik. Camera location46° 10′ 50.64″ N, 6° 47′ 23.82″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 46.180734; 6.789950.