Sea clover was first recognised as a new species by
Thomas Johnson, who found it in a saltmarsh at
Dartford on 10th June 1633 and named it
Trifolium stellatum glabrum, or "smooth starrie-headed trefoile'", in his revised edition of
Gerard's Herball that same year.
Linnaeus was impressed by the work of the early British botanists, especially
Dillenius, who had produced, in his opinion, the most perfect ("
perfectissima") Flora in his edition of
John Ray's
Synopsis methodica stirpium Britannicarum in 1724, so in 1759 he published a list of the plants of "Anglia" (Britain and Ireland) in his book
Amoenitates Academicae (vol. 4, p. 105). This included, from Dillenius's Flora, Johnson's smooth starrie clover, which he renamed
Trifolium squamosum. This name takes precedence because it is a properly formulated binomial, unlike Johnson's earlier polynomial. The epithet
squamosum means "scaly", but Linnaeus provided no explanation.
William Hudson was probably unaware of when he called sea clover
Trifolium maritimum, or
Trifolium spicis villosis globosis, calycibus patulis aequalibus, caule adscendente foliolis cuneiformibus hirsutis ("the trefoil with hairy globose spikes, equal gaping calyces, ascending stem and wedge-shaped hairy leaves") in his
Flora Anglica in 1762. As this was three years after Linnaeus's list, it stands only as the first synonym, of which there are now many.
Trifolium squamosum has a
chromosome number of 2
n = 16. and it has no currently accepted subspecies. ==Distribution and status==