Macroptilium lathyroides
Macroptilium lathyroides
Macroptilium lathyroides (L.) Urb.
Basionym: Phaseolus lathyroides L.; Macroptilium lathyroides var. lathyroides (L.) Urb.; Macroptilium lathyroides var. semierectum (L.) Urb.; Phaseolus crotalarioides Mart. ex Benth.; Phaseolus semierectus L.; Phaseolus semierectus var. angustifolius Benth.
Family: Fabaceae (alt. Leguminosae) subfamily: Faboideae tribe: Phaseoleae subtribe: Phaseolinae.
Herbaceous annual or short-lived perennial, erectly branching, 0.6–1 m tall, sometimes trailing, or twining to 1.5 m (especially in shade), becoming somewhat woody with age towards the base. Stems sparsely to densely appressed pubescent. Leaves trifoliolate; leaflets mostly entire, ovate to lanceolate, or narrowly elliptic, 3–8 cm long; 1–3.5 cm wide, upper surface glabrous, lower surface adpressed hairy, petioles 1–5 cm long, stipules lanceolate, 5–6 mm long lateral leaflets sometimes slightly lobed towards the base. Inflorescence a semi-erect, spicate raceme, about 15 cm long borne on axillary peduncles to about 30 cm long. Flowers papilionate on very short pedicels; calyx campanulate, 4–6 mm long; standard red to red-purple (rarely white or pink), roundish 13 mm, wing and keel petals tinged green, red, or white; keel spirally twisted. Pods linear, sub-cylindrical, 5.5–12 cm long, 2.5–3 mm wide, straight or slightly curved, glabrous or pubescent, the valves becoming strongly twisted on dehiscence (pods shatter readily on maturity), each pod containing up to 20 (–30) seeds. Seeds obliquely oblong, slightly compressed, about 3 mm long, mottled light and dark grey-brown or black. 88,000–154,000 seeds per kg.
Asia: 大翼豆 da yi dou (China); kacang batang (Indonesia); ファジービーン fajiibiin, ナンバンアカバナアズキ nanban-akabana-azuki (Japan); ถั่วผี thua-phi (Thailand)
English: phasey bean, phasemy-bean, quail bean, wild bean,one-leaf clover; wild dolly (Cayman Islands); quail bean (Florida); cow pea, cowpea, wild bush bean, wild pea bean, (Hawaii)
French: macroptilium à fleur rouge; pois-poison, pois-zombi(e) (Lesser Antilles)
German: Phasemybohne
Latin America: feijão-de-rola, feijão-de-rolinha, feijão-de-pombinha, feijão-dos-arrozais (Brazil); habichuela parada, látiros de pasto (Puerto Rico); porotillo, porotillo del campo, frijol de monte (Venezuela); frijol de los arrozales (Colombia); frijolito de los arrozales, pico de aura
Pacific: pini, piinivao (Tonga)
Native:
Northern America: Mexico
Caribbean: Antigua and Barbuda (Antigua); Bahamas; Barbados; Cayman Islands; Cuba; Dominica; Grenada; Guadeloupe; Jamaica; Martinique; Puerto Rico; St. Kitts and Nevis (St Kitts); St. Lucia; St. Vincent and The Grenadines
Central America: Belize; Costa Rica; Guatemala; Nicaragua; Panama
South America: Argentina; Bolivia; Brazil; Colombia; Ecuador; French Guiana; Guyana; Paraguay; Peru; Suriname; Venezuela
Naturalized:
Throughout the tropics and subtropics.
Mainly used as a pioneer forage, but can also be conserved as hay or as silage when mixed with a grass. Care must be taken to minimise leaf drop during hay making and handling.
It fixes nitrogen very effectively, and can be used as a green manure or cover crop in rotations.
Often used as indicator plant in pot and field trials.
Adapted to a wide range of well to poorly drained soils, from deep sands to heavy clays, and with a pH range of (5.0–) 6.0–7.0 (–8.0). It can tolerate moderate salinity, but is susceptible to higher levels of available soil manganese and aluminium, responding to lime to reduce available levels.
Found in areas with a rainfall range of (400–) 750–2,000 (–3,500) mm, usually in drainage lines and other wet places in lower rainfall environments. Although moderately drought tolerant, it avoids the effects of severe drought through its free-seeding annual habit. It grows on seasonally flooded soils, but not in permanent water.
Natural distribution extends from 25º N in Mexico to 30º S in Argentina, and from the low altitude subtropics to low (0 m asl, Panama) and high (2,000 m asl, Ecuador) altitude tropics. It can survive light frost, and although killed by heavy frost, has usually set seed before they occur.
Tolerant of light to moderate shade, although seedlings may suffer from shading. Its twining ability, once mature, enables it to compete for light with tall grasses.
It is day-neutral, flowering through most of the growing season. However, undefoliated plants generally do not flower until they reach about 30 cm tall. It can flower throughout the wet season but under shaded and humid conditions flowering and seed production are depressed and the plant assumes a twining growth habit.
M. lathyroides only persists for one or two years under continuous grazing. It should be lightly (at least 10–15 cm of legume growth in the pasture) or rotationally grazed, and/or rested for 6–8 weeks later in the growing season to facilitate seed set and encourage persistence. A light cultivation helps annual regeneration.
Plants do not survive fire, but soil seed germinates when conditions are suitable.
Guidelines for establishment and management of sown forages.
Percentage of hard seed is generally fairly low, but to break dormancy in small samples, seed can be manually scarified or treated with concentrated sulphuric acid (sg. gr. 1.8) for 20 minutes. Acid-treated seed should be washed and dried thoroughly after treatment. M. lathyroides is fairly promiscuous in its rhizobial relationships, mostly nodulating freely with strains already in the soil. If in doubt, seed can be inoculated with cowpea strain Bradyrhizobium, such as CB 756 (Australia) and C 5 or C 95 (Argentina). For best establishment, seed should drilled (1–1.5 cm) or broadcast onto a well-prepared seedbed and lightly covered. It can be sown at any time during spring and summer when moisture is adequate, using (1–) 3 (–10) kg/ha seed. It has a vigorous seedling, emerging and developing more quickly than Grona heterocarpa cv. Florida or Aeschynomene americana, and can be co-planted with these legumes to provide early summer grazing.
M. lathyroides grows best on fertile alluvial soils or heavy clays, where it rarely requires fertilizer. On less fertile (usually more acid) soils, it may require addition of 250 kg/ha molybdenised superphosphate and possibly other nutrients if indicated by soil analysis. If required, Mo is normally reapplied at 100 g/ha Mo every 3 or 4 years. If plant tissue analysis is <0.20% P, additional P may be required. Lime is sometimes necessary to reduce levels of available Al and Mn in more acid soils.
Once established, it combines well with more open grasses, particularly under fertile, moist conditions. Although free-seeding, seedling regeneration in pastures only occurs under favourable conditions, and is usually poor after the second year.
Grasses: Chloris gayana, Dichanthium aristatum, Megathyrsus maximus (cv. Petrie), Paspalum atratum, P. dilatatum, P. plicatulum, Setaria sphacelata, Urochloa mutica.
Legumes: Aeschynomene americana, Grona heterocarpa subsp. heterocarpa, Trifolium repens.
Late-sown seedlings in particular are severely attacked by bean fly (Ophiomyia (Melanagromyza) phaseoli Diptera: Agromyzidae). Coating seed with carbofuran or carbosulfan before sowing protects plants against attack for two to three weeks, as can banding systemic insecticides, such as phorate and carbofuran along the seeds at sowing. Weekly spraying of monocrotophos, dimethoate or omethoate during the first four weeks gives effective control. Adults of rough brown weevil (Baryopadus corrugatus Coleoptera: Curculionidae) feed on the foliage, while larvae can severely damage roots. M. lathyroides is an alternative host for silverleaf whitefly (Bemisia argentifolii Homoptera: Aleyrodidae), a serious pest of a number of crop plants.
Nematodes attack the roots in lighter textured soils, the main species being Meloidogyne incognita and M. javanica. It shows field resistance to little-leaf phytoplasma, but is susceptible to a multitude of viruses, few of which are of any consequence in the field.
It spreads readily from seed under moist conditions, providing competition is not too severe. Seed can be ejected several metres by virtue of the violent shattering mechanism on ripening.
Macroptilium lathyroides is widely naturalized and considered a minor weed of rice, but rarely a serious weed. However, it is regarded as an environmental weed in Queensland and the Northern Territory in Australia. There is also concern in some countries that it may be an alternative host for diseases of adjacent crops.
CP values range from about 7% in old stemmy material to 25% in young vegetative growth, and IVDMD from 40 to 70%. NDF has been measured at 52 and 62%, compared with ADF of 40 and 46%, and IVDMD of 71 and 76% in different accessions. Leaf:stem ratio averages about 0.3 compared with 0.6 for Aeschynomene americana.
M. lathyroides is claimed to be less palatable to stock when young and more palatable after seed set, although this may largely reflect a change in relative palatability of associated grasses.
No record of problems with ruminants, and although suspected of causing poisoning with horses, other evidence suggests to the contrary. It does not produce milk taint.
DM yields depend on grass competition and growing conditions, and range from 500 kg/ha when grown with grass in the subhumid subtropics, up to 13 t/ha in pure sward under ideal conditions.
Published performance results are largely confounded by the presence of other species.
Closely self-pollinated; 2n = 22. No breeding programs have been undertaken, any plant improvement coming from wild selections.
As with some other Macroptilium spp., flowering appears to be at least partly induced by a drying environment, although vigorous pollen germination and pollen tube growth are favoured by humidity. Pods mature throughout the growing season, with high levels of seed being produced. The absence of a synchronous crop and the shattering habit of the pods make machine harvest difficult and only a proportion of the crop produced is harvested. It can be direct-headed when a fair percentage of the pods are ripe to ripening and the material subsequently dried where seed from dehiscing pods will not be lost. Seed can then be threshed in a follow-up operation. Machine harvest can yield 30–150 kg/ha seed, and hand harvest about 250 kg/ha.
Susceptible to pre-emergence application of azafenidin. Moderate tolerance of 2,4-D amine. Decent control by mixture of glyphosate and 2,4-D.
Cameron, D.G. (1985) Tropical and subtropical legumes. 8: Phasey bean (Macroptilium lathyroides). The predecessor of Siratro. Queensland Agricultural Journal 111:211–214.
Jones, R.M. and Mannetje, L.’t (1992) Macroptilium lathyroides (L.) Urban. In: Mannetje, L.’t and Jones, R.M. (eds) Plant Resources of South-East Asia No. 4. Forages. Pudoc Scientific Publishers, Wageningen, the Netherlands. p. 155–157. edepot.wur.nl/327785
Milford, R. (1967) Nutritive values and chemical composition of seven tropical legumes and lucerne grown in subtropical south-eastern Queensland. Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture and Animal Husbandry 7(29):540–545. doi.org/10.1071/EA9670540
Murphy, H.E., Edwards, D.G. and Asher, C.J. (1984) Effects of aluminium on nodulation and early growth of four tropical pasture legumes. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 35(5):663–673. doi.org/10.1071/AR9840663
Othman, W.M.W. and Asher, C.J. (1991) Effects of stubble leaf removal and frequent cutting on nitrogen fixation and regrowth of phasey bean. Malaysian Journal of Applied Biology 20:39–49. agris.upm.edu.my:8080/dspace/handle/0/4561
Pitman, W.D., Kretschmer Jr., A.E. and Chambliss, C.G. (1986) Phasey bean, a summer legume with forage potential for Florida flatwoods. Florida Agricultural Experiment Station Circular S-231. University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Thro, A.M. and Shock, C.C. (1987) Performance of subtropical forage legumes in Louisiana, south-central USA. Tropical Agriculture 64:297–304.
Wilson, G.P.M. (1958) The phasey bean. Some questions and answers. Agricultural Gazette of New South Wales 69:512–514, 517. hdl.handle.net/2027/uc1.b2923569
'Murray' Released in Queensland, Australia (1966). Selected from naturalized ecotypes in coastal Queensland, and possibly CPI 5676 from the botanical gardens in Bogor, Indonesia. Less productive than CPI 49771 in Australia, or the naturalized ecotype in Florida, USA. Commercial seed rarely available.
'Mancebo' Released by La Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Santa Fe, Argentina (2016). No information available.
CPI 49771 Selected in Queensland, Australia. Sourced from the Instituto de Pesquisas IRI, Matão, São Paulo state, Brazil. Origin Bahia, Brazil. A tall-growing, vigorous, productive genotype with slightly lobed terminal and lateral leaflets and densely pubescent stems. Well adapted to acid and alkaline soils in the humid and subhumid subtropics.