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Photo is of parent taxon

Wallowa bladder-pod

Habit Plants usually prostrate and straggling; trichomes (lower layer) smoother, (upper layer) moderately tuberculate, much less so over flat or mounded center.
Basal leaves

blade margins sinuate or lobed, or, sometimes, lyrate.

Racemes

not secund, elongated and loose in fruit.

Fruiting pedicels

usually sigmoid.

Fruits

slightly wider than long, apex truncate or retuse;

valves pubescent inside;

septum fenestrate;

ovules 4–6 per ovary;

style to 9 mm.

Petals

yellow.

2n

= 10.

Physaria kingii subsp. diversifolia

Phenology Flowering May–Aug.
Habitat Talus slopes, gravelly flood banks, steep limestone cliffs, rock crevices, marble chiprock, sandy and gravelly soils
Elevation 1200-3000 m (3900-9800 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
OR
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Subspecies diversifolia is found in the Elkhorn and Wallowa mountains.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Source FNA vol. 7, p. 646.
Parent taxa Brassicaceae > tribe Physarieae > Physaria > Physaria kingii
Sibling taxa
P. kingii subsp. bernardina, P. kingii subsp. cobrensis, P. kingii subsp. kaibabensis, P. kingii subsp. kingii, P. kingii subsp. latifolia, P. kingii subsp. utahensis
Synonyms Lesquerella diversifolia, Lesquerella kingii subsp. diversifolia, Lesquerella kingii var. sherwoodii, Lesquerella occidentalis subsp. diversifolia, Lesquerella occidentalis var. diversifolia, Lesquerella sherwoodii, P. kingii var. diversifolia
Name authority (Greene) O’Kane & Al-Shehbaz: Novon 12: 325. (2002)
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