Carried by 3 nurseries
View Availability at NurseryData provided by the participants of the Consortium of California Herbaria
View additional distribution information on the Jepson eflora
Lupinus truncatus is a species in the Fabaceae (Legume) family known by the common name Collared Annual Lupine. It is native to the coastal mountain ranges and canyons of Baja California and California as far north as the San Francisco Bay Area. It grows in slope habitat such as chaparral and woodland, including areas that have recently burned. This is an annual herb growing no more than half a meter tall. Each palmate leaf is made up of 5 to 8 narrow linear leaflets measuring 2 to 4 centimeters in length and just a few millimeters wide. The leaflets usually have truncate tips, or tips that appear sharply cut off and squared, the characteristic that gives the plant its species name. The flower cluster is a raceme of widely-spaced flowers each roughly a centimeter long. The flower is magenta or reddish purple in color with a yellowish or magenta patch on its banner. The fruit is a hairy legume pod about 3 centimeters long and half a centimeter wide.
Annual herb
1 - 2 ft Tall
1 ft Wide
Upright
Pleasant
Lavender, Purple, Pink
Winter, Spring
Full Sun, Partial Shade
Moderate
Max 2x / month once established
Tolerates cold to 5° F
Fast, Medium, Slow
Adaptable.
Tolerates serpentine soil..
Soil PH: 5.0 - 8.0
For propagating by seed: Fresh seeds need no treatment. Stored seeds scarification or hot water; No treatment may give fair germination.
7*, 8, 9, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18*, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24
Openings in coastal sage scrub or chaparral, or in grasslands
Chaparral, Coastal Sage Scrub, Valley Grassland
Use with other annuals or perennial herbs such as Clarkia spp., California Poppy (Eschscholzia californica), and Tidy Tips (Layia platyglossa)
Butterflies and moths supported
0 confirmed and 43 likely
Painted Tiger Moth
Arachnis picta
Oso Flaco Flightless Moth
Areniscythris brachypteris
Orange Tortrix Moth
Argyrotaenia franciscana