Clover, Red

Name: Red Clover

Botanical Name: Trifolium pratense

Form: wildflower and cultivated agricultural plant

Parts Used: seeds and greens

 

Citation: Guenther, K. (2019, February 21) Red clover as wildlife food [Web log post.] Retrieved: supply the date, from http://wildfoods4wildlife.com

[image description: close-up of red clover flower]
Red clover flower.

Getting Started

Clover is a super easy foraging or gardening project that anyone can do, and it will be well utilized, especially by the rabbits. However, there are some serious concerns to consider, so make sure you read on about toxic potentials of clovers. Even so, clover greens rank #4 on our Great Greens list and the seed is #25 on our Super Seeds list!

Fabaceae (Pea family)

Faboideae (Pea subfamily)

Trifolieae (Clover tribe)

Trifolium (Clover genus)

[image description: an agricultural field of crimson clover behind a white farm fence]
An agricultural field of crimson clover.

The vast majority of clovers are agricultural escapees— red clover, white clover and crimson clover. Clover is used extensively in agriculture because it works symbiotically with a bacteria in the soil to fix nitrogen in the soil (Elpel, 2013) and nitrogen is an element that all plants need to grow. For this reason— as well as its use as livestock fodder— one can readily buy seed inexpensively from farm stores and grow your own. However, farm store seed often comes coated with anti-fungal chemicals to help preserve the seed. I strongly suggest instead purchasing a seed clean of any coatings if you plan to grow clover for your rehab animals.  One source I use is Strictly Medicinal Seeds out of Oregon. Also, clover seed can be collected from the field and the greens can be found often around the un-mowed areas of chemical-free yards.

[image description: anti-fungal coated clover seeds in a bowl]
Commercial agricultural clover seeds are often coated in anti-fungal coatings. It might be best to grow from non-coated seed stock.
[image description: 4 white clover flowers and leaves against a blue bacground]
White flowered clovers may be best to avoid due to cyanogenic risk.

The big risk about clovers to understand is that many clovers have risk of creating cyanide—which can be a deadly poison. Red or yellow flowered clovers are the safest for use as food for wildlife. White-flowered clovers—especially Trifolium repens— has the potential to be cyanogenic— meaning that it could release cyanide when bruised, chopped, wilted, or frosted. The cyanide compounds of white clover exist as a plant defense probably to ward off small herbivores such as insects, snails and voles. In the wild, you will see rabbits and groundhogs eating these white clovers all the time.  So why don’t they get poisoned? Well, there could be a couple of reasons.

  1. Herbivores browse and nibble from plant to plant to plant. They get quite a varied diet of many different plants. They may eat some plants that have cyanide and yet the quantity ingested doesn’t reach the threshold necessary to cause problems.
  2. Also, animals have the ability to detoxify small quantities of toxins, even cyanide. So the level of cyanide in the plant may be enough to hurt an insect, but a larger animal like a groundhog will be able to detoxify it.
  3. As mentioned, different species of clovers have different amounts of cyanide risk associated with them. But even two clover plants of the same species growing side by side can vary in the amount of cyanide potential they contain, or they can vary in cyanogenic risk at different times in the growing season—and there is just no way to know by looking at them. From what I have read, the clovers native to colder habitats have not evolved to produce cyanide, which is one reason why red clovers do not produce as much, if any, cyanide.
  4. A plant that can produce cyanide is likely to do so when the plant becomes wilted, bruised, smashed, or chopped. In the wild, clover is consumed fresh and live—the ideal condition for minimizing cyanide production.
[image description: clover seedlings growing in a terra cotta dish]
A method to offer live, fresh clover: growing and offering live plants you rotate out.

There is another fairly common risk in clovers and that is their potential for nitrate toxicity, which can occur to some plants when fertilizers are applied and the plant temporarily is surging with uptaken nitrates or if the plant stops growing due to drought.

Each reader will have to decide for oneself about the risk vs. benefit of clover. Do more research until you convince yourself one way or the other about what you are comfortable offering your rehab animals.  Read more on this website about both cyanide and nitrate accumulation risks.

If you do choose to offer clovers, here are some ways to decrease risk:

  • Use red clover, Trifolium pratense
  • Grow clover in pots and offer the live plant in the enclosure, rather than cutting it first.
  • If you do use cut clovers, immerse the cut ends in a glass of water and store in the refrigerator until feeding time to reduce wilting.
  • Offer the plant as whole as possible; minimize chopping.
  • Avoid harvesting clover for a week or more after direct or nearby fertilization or during severe drought.

Clovers have some look-alike plants that do fool people, at times. The main one is wood sorrel, which you can read about and see pictures of HERE. Wood sorrel has heart shaped leaves. Clover leaves are oval to round.

[image description: wood sorrel plant with heart shaped leaves and yellow, regular flower]
This is a clover look-alike: Wood Sorrel. Woods sorrel leaflets are in 3’s like clover, but heart shaped. And the flowers are regular in wood sorrel.

The “tri” of clover’s Trifolium refers to the 3-part leaflet you will find on clovers as well as other clover cousins—alfalfa and black medic of the Medicago genus.

[image description: red clover leaflets]
A mass of red clover leaflets.

However, there is another plant to probably best to avoid and that is referred to as “sweetclover”— which is not a true clover at all but is instead part of the genus Melilotus—and sweetclover has a higher coumarin content than Trifolium clovers. Coumarin is what makes these plants smell so sweet, but also makes them more dangerous to add as a wildlife food because they act as an anticoagulant to the blood (Elpel, 2013). You are not likely to confuse sweetclovers with the red clover you want because sweetclovers are tall— up to 3 feet— with branches and taller racemes of blooms in white or yellow at the top.

[image description: tall white clover flower raceme]
Tall raceme flower head of sweet white clover (Melilotus), not the same genus as red clover (Trifolium).
Common Name Virginia Trifolium Species Flower Color Origin Rare Plant Status
rabbitfoot clover T. arvense white and pink non-native Not rare
golden clover T. aureum yellow   non-native Not rare
running glade clover T. calcaricum White with wine-color veins Native Globally imperiled and at highest risk of extinction, only in Lee Co., Virginia and Rutherford Co. Tennessee
field clover T. campestre yellow non-native Not rare
suckling clover T. dubium yellow non-native Not rare
alsike clover T. hybridum white and pink non-native Not rare
crimson clover T. incarnatum deep red non-native Not rare
red clover T. pratense magenta non-native Not rare
buffalo clover T. reflexum white to pink to red native Globally vulnerable, critically imperiled in Virginia
white clover T. repens white and pink non-native Not rare
arrowleaf clover T. vesiculosum white and pink non-native Not rare
Kate’s Mountain Clover T. virginicum creamy white with purple veins native Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
[image description: map of US and canada indicating that every state and province has red clover growing in it]
Range map:
USDA, NRCS. 2015. The PLANTS Database (http://plants.usda.gov, 4 January 2016). National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC 27401-4901 USA.

Virginia Botanical Associates. (Accessed January 2016). Digital Atlas of the Virginia Flora (http://www.vaplantatlas.org). c/o Virginia Botanical Associates, Blacksburg.

Key Features to look for:

In addition to using the identification guide of your choice, here are a couple of features you should see on red clover:

  • Leaves consisting of three leaflets with a lighter gray/green chevron pattern on each leaflet (sometimes faint)
  • Whole plant less than knee high, usually
  • Stems are hairy, (look closely)
  • Dozens and dozens of tiny pink flowers form a single globe of flowers (inflorescence)  atop each stem
[image description: white chevron markings on red clover leaves]
Red clover leaflet markings.

Risks:  Some species with white-flowered clovers can especially produce cyanide. Clovers can also cause bloat, photosensitization, and negative estrogen effects, which has been documented in horses and cattle. All clovers can accumulate nitrates. (Canadian Biodiversity Info System, Retrieved on 8/6/17 from the Canadian Biodiversity  Information Facility at http://www.cbif.gc.ca/eng/species-bank/canadian-poisonous-plants-information-system/canadian-poisonous-plants-information-system/?id=1370403266275)

Flower Description: The magenta flower head of red clover are round and consist of many small individual pea-like, irregular flowers. Pea-like flowers have a large top petal, two smaller wide petals called “wings’, and the bottom two petals are fused to form a “keel”, which looks like a folded petal at the bottom with a ridge down the center. With a hand lens, you can see that each of clovers many flowers consist of these wings and keels.

[image description: a handful of red clover greens and flowers]

Leaf Description: The red clover leaf consists of three leaflets whose edges (margins) are smooth (entire) or finely toothed or not toothed, and surface of leaf is somewhat hairy. The middle leaflet of the leaf has almost no stalk (petiole). Leaves are blunt-tipped and usually have a gray-white “V” or chevron marking in the center of each leaflet blade. This chevron is sometimes quite obvious, sometimes more faint, but always there.

[image description: red clover seeds and their dried united sepals]
Red clover seeds (in natural state, un-coated) and their dry united sepal casings.

Seed Size: Irregular shape, tan color seeds look like little beans, proving yet again this is a legume! Seed is 1/16 inch (1.5 mm), roundish.

Harvesting

  Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
  winter winter late winter early spring spring late spring early summer summer late summer early fall fall late fall
seeds                             x x x x            
greens           x x x x x x x x x x x x              

Does this lend itself to being good enrichment item?  Maybe. Clover regenerates after you cut it, a little like grass does, so it may be possible to grow greens right in an enclosure in a shallow pan or pot and allow the mammals to graze at will. You may want to seed multiple containers and switch them out weekly to re-grow and revitalize—a “field rotation” where you actually rotate the field rather than the animals!

Nutrition: Greens are high in protein and carbohydrates. Clovers pack a protein punch nutritionally. Red clover is considered the most digestible of the clovers and contain flavonoids which give color to the flower and act as an anti-inflammatory and antioxidant (Elpel, 2013).

Harvesting Greens:  Cut whole plants leaving roots in the ground and the plant will re-grow. Or pull up whole plant with roots attached and store in water in refrigerator to reduce wilting risks.

How to Store Prepared Greens

As already mentioned, clover greens should be used quickly and kept from wilting for safety reasons. For this particular green, I suggest pulling the whole plant if possible and leaving the root on. Immediately submerge root in bucket water, even while out in the field. Transfer to a glass of water and store upright in the refrigerator with a loose baggie over the top of the greens. Minimize chopping or bruising of the plant, use within a day or so, and never use if wilted.

[image description: 3 different developmental stages of flowers from fresh flower to dry seed head]
This photo shows clover over time as it develops seed. Left is fresh flower. Center is unripe seed. Far right flower heads are dry and brittle and ready to be harvested for mature seed.

Harvesting Seeds: Each flower head of clover is made up of many 30-100 individual flowers attached to a cone like structure (staminal tube) that sits atop the flower stalk. When the pink flower petals lose their color and turn brown, the seed inside is maturing. The seed is ready to harvest when you can pinch the dry brown petals and easily pull the flowers away from the remaining staminal tube cone.

[image description: 2 clover plants with seeds and flowers removes leaving staminal tube parts attached to stems]
Two staminal tubes pointing upward from clover.

What you now have is the petals, united sepals and seeds. The seeds are very small and irregularly shaped but smooth, up to about 3/32 inch (2 mm). The cone structure (united sepal) that surrounds the seeds, and is the base for the petals, is about ¼ inch (6 mm) long.

At this point, the seeds should fall out of the flowers’ sepals just by tossing, stirring and flipping the flowers around in a large bowl. The heavier seeds will fall to the bottom, the petals and sepals rise to the top. You can use a sieve to separate the seeds from the dry brown flower bits. You will undoubtedly have some of the sepals mixed in with the seeds, but jostling the pan, the dry sepals and any leftover petals should rise to the sit on top of the seeds where you can carefully pinch more of them out, if you choose.

How to Store Prepared Seeds: Once cleaned and fully dried, choose a low humidity day—not a rainy day—to jar up your seed.

Glass or metal works best, because all plastics are somewhat porous to humidity. Canning jars and lids work well. Place seed in a tightly sealed, glass container and store in a dark, cool area for up to 1 year. Refrigeration and freezing work well. Label the airtight container with the seed name, date of harvest and which animals it should be used for. 

If you intend to keep the seed longer than one year, jar up the seeds in two stages. First, jar the seeds up using a desiccant for up to 1 week. Then check the seed for dryness, and if dry enough, remove the desiccant and immediately repack the seed into an airtight container. Read more about drying seeds and using desiccants under the tab “Food Harvest, Process and Storage: Picking, Curing, Threshing, Winnowing, Drying and Storing Seed.”

Keep stored seed in an airtight glass or metal container in a cool, dark place. Refrigeration and freezing works well, but allow container to warm to room temperature before opening. Discard any seed that ever appears moldy. See instructions under the tab labeled “Food Harvest, Process and Storage.”   http://www.wildfoods4wildlife.com

 Rare Species in Virginia

Do you live in one of these Virginia counties? If so, be aware that there are some species near you that may be threatened or endangered. Do more research to make sure you are identifying your target species correctly and not harvesting a threatened species!

Running glade clover—with its white flowers – is globally and locally extremely threatened plant known only to exists in Lee Co., Virginia and Rutherford Co., Tennessee. At a glance, it could be easily mistaken for white clover. But you would not be likely to confuse it with red clover, if you see it in bloom since the flower color is different. Running glade clover has above-ground runners (stolons) like what you may have seen connecting strawberry plants. But so does white clover (T. repens). So, it might be best to use only clover you grow yourself from seed if you live in one of these two counties and not risk harvesting a plant threatened with extinction.

Buffalo clover also can easily be mistaken for a white clover, but has larger flower heads, is taller overall and there are no white watermark chevrons on the leaves according to Dr.  John Hilty at http://www.illinoiswildflowers.info/weeds/plants/white_clover.htm

County in Virginia Species Alert
Allegheny Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Amelia buffalo clover Globally vulnerable, critically imperiled in Virginia
Augusta Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Bath Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Botetourt Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Craig Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Cumberland buffalo clover Globally vulnerable, critically imperiled in Virginia
Culpepper Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Fairfax buffalo clover Globally vulnerable, critically imperiled in Virginia
Franklin Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Frederick Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Giles buffalo clover Globally vulnerable, critically imperiled in Virginia
Halifax buffalo clover Globally vulnerable, critically imperiled in Virginia
Highland Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Lee running glade clover Globally imperiled  and at highest risk of extinction, only in  Lee Co., Virginia and Rutherford Co. Tennessee
Loudon Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Mecklenburg buffalo clover Globally vulnerable, critically imperiled in Virginia
Pittsylvania buffalo clover Globally vulnerable, critically imperiled in Virginia
Prince George buffalo clover Globally vulnerable, critically imperiled in Virginia
Prince William buffalo clover Globally vulnerable, critically imperiled in Virginia
Rockbridge Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Rockingham Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Shenandoah Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia
Sussex buffalo clover Globally vulnerable, critically imperiled in Virginia
Warren Kate’s Mountain Clover Globally vulnerable, vulnerable in Virginia

(Townsend, John F., 2015)

Feed red clover to:

clover

(Trifolium spp.)

flowers/buds/catkins

Caution: Some species of clover, especially white-flowered clovers, can produce cyanide. Also can cause bloat, photosensitization, and negative estrogen effects, documented in horses and cattle. All clovers can accumulate nitrates.(Canadian Biodiversity Information Facility, 2013)

clover

(Trifolium spp.)

greens

Caution: Some species of clover, especially white-flowered clovers, can produce cyanide. Also can cause bloat, photosensitization, and negative estrogen effects, documented in horses and cattle. All clovers can accumulate nitrates.(Canadian Biodiversity Information Facility, 2013)

Deer, White-tailed

Odocoileus virginianus

strong preference

Beaver, American

Castor canadensis

Cottontail, Eastern

Sylvilagus floridanus

Hare, Snowshoe

Lepus americanus

Lemming, various spp.

Synaptomys spp.

Moose

Alces americanus

Muskrat, Common

Ondatra zibethicus

Skunk, Spotted

Spilogale putorius

Skunk, Striped

Mephitis mephitis

Vole, Meadow

Microtus pennsylvanicus

Vole, Pine

Microtus pinetorum

Voles, various spp.

various species

Bobwhite, Northern

Colinus virginianus

Grouse, Ruffed

Bonasa umbellus

Grouse, Sharp-tailed

Tympanuchus phasianellus

Pheasant, Ring-necked

Phasianus colchicus

Turkey, Wild

Meleagris gallopavo

clover

(Trifolium spp.)

seeds

Caution: Some species of clover, especially white-flowered clovers, can produce cyanide. Also can cause bloat, photosensitization, and negative estrogen effects, documented in horses and cattle. All clovers can accumulate nitrates.(Canadian Biodiversity Information Facility, 2013)

Lemming, various spp.

Synaptomys spp.

Vole, Meadow

Microtus pennsylvanicus

Vole, Pine

Microtus pinetorum

Voles, various spp.

various species

Dickcissel

Spiza americana

Dove, Rock

Columba livia

Flicker, Northern

Colaptes auratus

Lark, Horned

Eremophila alpestris

Meadowlark, Eastern

Sturnella magna

Pipit, American

Anthus rubescens

Robin, American

Turdus migratorius

Sparrow, Chipping

Spizella passerina

Sparrow, Song

Melospiza melodia

Veery

Catharus fuscescens

Bobwhite, Northern

Colinus virginianus

Bufflehead

Bucephala albeola

Coot, American

Fulica americana

Grouse, Ruffed

Bonasa umbellus

Grouse, Sharp-tailed

Tympanuchus phasianellus

Mallard

Anas platyrhynchos

Partridge, Gray

Perdix perdix

Pheasant, Ring-necked

Phasianus colchicus

Pintail, Northern

Anas acuta

Turkey, Wild

Meleagris gallopavo

[image description: a field of crimson clover in bloom]
Agricultural planting of crimson clover.

Book Resources:

Elpel, T.J. (2013) Botany in a Day (APG). Pony, Montana: Hops Press, LLC.

Martin, A.C., Zim, H.S., Nelson, A.L. (1951). American Wildlife and Plants: A Guide to Wildlife Food Habits. New York: Dover Publications.

Scott, M. (2013). Songbird Diet Index. National Wildlife Rehabilitators Association, St. Cloud, MN.

Townsend, J. F. (2015, April)  Rare Plants Natural Heritage Technical Report 15-10. (Unpublished Report) Richmond, Virginia: Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, Division of Natural Heritage.

On-Line Resources:

Canadian Biodiversity Info System, Retrieved on 8/6/17 from the Canadian Biodiversity  Information Facility at http://www.cbif.gc.ca/eng/species-bank/canadian-poisonous-plants-information-system/canadian-poisonous-plants-information-system/?id=1370403266275)

Coladonato, Milo. 1993. Trifolium repens. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/forb/trirep/all.html [2016, December 24].

Hilty, J. (2002). White clover. Retrieved March 1, 2017 from http://www.illinoiswildflowers.info/weeds/plants/white_clover.htm

USDA, NRCS. 2015. The PLANTS Database (http://plants.usda.gov, 4 January 2016). National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC 27401-4901 USA.

Virginia Botanical Associates. (Accessed January 2016). Digital Atlas of the Virginia Flora (http://www.vaplantatlas.org). c/o Virginia Botanical Associates, Blacksburg.