Descurainia |
Descurainia incana |
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tansy mustard |
grey tansy-mustard, mountain tansy-mustard, Richardson's tansy mustard |
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Habit | Annuals, biennials, or perennials [shrubs, subshrubs]; not scapose; glabrous, glabrate, or sparsely to densely pubescent, trichomes usually short-stalked, dendritic, rarely also simple, sometimes mixed with unicellular, glandular, clavate papillae. | Biennials; usually eglandular, rarely glandular; finely pubescent, sometimes canescent, trichomes dendritic. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | erect or prostrate, unbranched or branched basally and/or distally. |
erect, unbranched basally, often many-branched distally, (1.5–)2.5–12 dm. |
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Leaves | basal and cauline; petiolate or sessile; basal (often withered by flowering), rosulate, petiolate, blade (1–3-pinnate), margins entire or toothed; cauline petiolate or sessile, blade often similar to basal. |
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Basal leaves | petiole 1–3.5(–5.5) cm; blade pinnatifid, broadly lanceolate to oblanceolate or obovate in outline, 1.5–10(–13) cm, lateral lobes linear to oblong or narrowly lanceolate, [3–10(–15) × 1–3(–5) mm], margins entire. |
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Cauline leaves | sessile or shortly petiolate; blade smaller distally, distal lobes often narrower. |
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Racemes | (proximally sometimes bracteate), elongated or not in fruit. |
considerably elongated in fruit. |
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Flowers | sepals erect to spreading, ovate to oblong or linear; petals usually obovate or oblanceolate, rarely oblong, (shorter to longer than sepals), claw obsolete or distinct, (apex obtuse); stamens tetradynamous; filaments not dilated basally; anthers oblong to ovate, (apex obtuse); nectar glands confluent, subtending bases of stamens, median glands present. |
sepals erect, yellowish, oblong, 1–1.8 mm, sparsely pubescent; petals oblanceolate, 1.2–2 × 0.3–0.6 mm; median filaments 1.4–2 mm; anthers 0.3–0.4 mm. |
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Fruiting pedicels | divaricate or erect, slender. |
erect to erect-ascending, straight, 2–8(–11) mm. |
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Fruits | siliques or silicles, sessile, usually linear, oblong, clavate, or fusiform, rarely ellipsoid or obovoid, smooth or torulose, terete; valves each often with distinct midvein, usually glabrous, rarely pubescent; replum rounded; septum complete or perforated (membranous, not veined or with 1–3 longitudinal veins); ovules 5–100 per ovary; style usually absent, rarely distinct; stigma capitate. |
erect, (often strictly appressed to rachis), linear, slightly torulose, (4–)5–10(–15) × 0.7–1.2(–1.5) mm, (acute at both ends); valves each with distinct midvein; septum often with distinct midvein; ovules 14–22 per ovary; style 0.1–0.4 mm, glabrous. |
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Seeds | uniseriate or biseriate, plump, wingless, oblong or ellipsoid; seed coat (minutely reticulate), usually mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons incumbent. |
uniseriate, reddish brown, ellipsoid to narrowly oblong, 0.8–1.2 × 0.4–0.5 mm. |
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x | = 7. |
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2n | = 14, 28. |
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Descurainia |
Descurainia incana |
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Phenology | Flowering May–Sep. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Alpine and subalpine areas, gravel and sand bars, scree, grassy slopes, prairies, steep rocky slopes, roadsides, disturbed sites, waste grounds, meadows, spruce-fir, pine, aspen, or sagebrush communities | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 100-3500 m (300-11500 ft) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
North America; Mexico; South America; Eurasia; n Africa; Atlantic Islands (Canary Islands) |
AK; CA; CO; ID; ME; MN; MT; ND; NM; NV; SD; UT; WY; AB; BC; MB; NT; NU; ON; QC; SK; YT
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Discussion | Species 45–47 (14 in the flora). Descurainia species are distributed in three major centers: North America (17 species), South America (ca. 20 species), and the Canary Islands (7 species). Excluding D. sophioides, which extends into Siberia from arctic North America, three additional species are found outside those regions: D. kochii (Petri) O. E. Schulz (Caucasus, Turkey), D. sophia (a cosmopolitan weed of Eurasian origin), and D. tanacetifolia (Linnaeus) Prantl (Alps and the Iberian Peninsula). Descurainia is taxonomically difficult throughout most of the New World, especially the United States. Extensive morphological variation exists within numerous species and many wide-ranging and widely-overlapping taxa appear to intergrade endlessly. Inter- and infraspecific hybridization is probably extensive given the lack of reproductive barriers between the recently evolved New World species, the ready dispersibility of the mucilaginous seeds, and the weedy tendencies of the majority of taxa that readily occupy disturbed habitats. The frequent occurrence of hybrid populations, suggested by the intergrading morphology and widespread polyploidy, is supported by recent molecular evidence (B. E. Goodson 2007). A second factor contributing to the complexity of North American Descurainia is that the number of taxonomically reliable characters is somewhat limited, with a general lack of agreement among various authors on the characters to be emphasized for circumscription of taxa. A taxonomic nightmare has resulted from the recognition of numerous poorly defined species, subspecies, and varieties. Although an extensive molecular systematic study of the genus was recently conducted (Goodson), some relationships and species boundaries remain unclear. Because detailed population-level, morphological, cytological, and molecular studies of North American Descurainia are still needed, this treatment represents an early “pit stop” on the road to full understanding of the complexity in the genus. The keys and circumscriptions in both L. E. Detling (1939) and R. C. Rollins (1993) are unreliable for the identification of a given collection to an infraspecific taxon. In a genus where interspecific hybridization is so extensive, it is sometimes impossible to identify reliably every single specimen, especially if mature fruits are lacking. Unfortunately, most North American material in major herbaria consists of either specimens without mature fruits or unrecognized hybrids between various taxa. As a consequence, up to 60% of the holdings of Descurainia species in the major North American herbaria are misidentified. Because mature fruits are critical to proper identification, the following key relies primarily on fruiting material. Almost all taxonomists have used the presence versus absence of glandular papillae as an important character to subdivide a given complex into species, subspecies, varieties, or forms. Both glandular and eglandular forms sometimes occur within a given population of Descurainia incana, D. incisa, D. paradisa, D. pinnata, or D. sophioides. Some authors were inconsistent in according formal recognition to the glandular versus eglandular plants of a given species. For example, R. C. Rollins (1993) treated the glandular and eglandular forms of D. obtusa and D. paradisa, but not of D. incana and D. sophioides, as distinct subspecies; N. H. Holmgren (2005b) recognized such forms as varieties in D. paradisa but not D. incana. Although the presence versus absence of glands appears to be consistent within certain taxa, reliance on the use of glands as a diagnostic character should be applied with extreme caution. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Descurainia incana is a distinctive species readily separated from the other North American taxa of the genus by having fruits and fruiting bases strictly appressed to rachises, and septums with a distinct midvein. Collections identified as such, but with fruits and pedicels not or only weakly appressed to the rachis, most likely represent hybrids between this species and others. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 7, p. 518. | FNA vol. 7, p. 522. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | Huguenenia, Sophia | Sisymbrium incanum, D. incana var. brevipes, D. incana var. macrosperma, D. incana var. major, D. incana subsp. procera, D. richardsonii var. alpestris, D. richardsonii var. brevipes, D. richardsonii var. macrosperma, D. richardsonii subsp. procera, D. richardsonii var. procera, Sisymbrium canescens var. alpestre, Sisymbrium canescens var. brevipes, Sisymbrium canescens var. major, Sisymbrium procerum, Sophia brevipes, Sophia procera | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | Webb & Berthelot: Hist. Nat. Îsles Canaries 3(2,3): 72. (1836) | (Bernhardi ex Fischer & C. A. Meyer) Dorn: Vasc. Pl. Wyoming, 296. (1988) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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