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Published In: Mémoires du Muséum d'Histoire Naturelle 7(1): 229. 1821. (Mém. Mus. Hist. Nat.) Name publication detailView in Biodiversity Heritage Library
 

Project Name Data (Last Modified On 6/2/2011)
Acceptance : Accepted
Project Data     (Last Modified On 6/3/2011)
General/Distribution: Represented by 11 genera and 36 species in our area.

 

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Lateral nectar glands various, often annular or semi-annular, simple or variously lobed; middle glands present or absent. Hairs simple, branched or absent. Sepals subequal, erect or subspreading. Stamen filaments without append-ages, rarely toothed. Ovary sessile or with short gynophore; stigma capitate, often slightly bilobed. Siliquae usually linear (rarely elliptic or sub-globose sillicula-like), usually compressed or flattened parallel to the septum, dehiscent (rarely tardily or hardly dehiscent, broadly septate (rarely septum incomplete or obsolete); seeds 1-2-seriate, generally not muciloginous when wet.; radicle usually accumbent.
 

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1.Siliquae ± compressed or flattened, with valves ± flat or terete
2.Valves usually opening suddenly and coiling spirally upwards; leaves usually pinnate
Cardamine
2.Valves not opening like above; leaves entire to sinuate or dentate (very rarely lyrate or pinnate)
3.Plants robust with basal leaves soon withering; siliquae elongated, ± appressed to stem
Turritis
3.Plants usually not so tall and the basal leaves not withering soon ; siliquae short (rarely long), ± spreading or ascending
4.Leaves usually deeply sinuate-dentate; flowers bright yellow
4.Leaves entire or toothed above; flowers white, lilac or rarely mauve-yellow or yellowish
5.Basal leaves usually short, spathulate or obovate, 3,5 (-10)-lobulate or toothed above (rarely entire or subentire), often villous with simple or forked hairs
Christolea
5.Basal leaves usually elongated, oblanceolate or oblong-obovate, entire, dentate or sinuate-dentate, ± hairy with simple and branched hairs (rarely villous)
6.Siliquae short (up to 2 cm long), linear, usually contorted densely covered with minute branched or stellate hairs, tardily dehiscent
Phaeonychium
6.Siliquae usually elongated and strongly compressed, mostly not contorted, glabrous (rarely hairy ), dehiscent
7.Flowers small, subsessile, yellow. Plants annual, small with radical leaves only stigma sessile or subsessile
Drabopsis
7.Flowers mediocre or large, usually white, pedicellate. Plants perennial, usually tall, leafy (rarely scapose); stigma on a distinct style
Arabis
1.Siliquae subcylindrical or subcompressed, sometimes ellipsoid, with valves ± convex
8.Scapes 1-flowered; leaves radical only
Pegaeophyton
8.Racemes many flowered; stem leafy
9.Flowers yellow
Rorippa
9.Flowers white or lilac
10.Plants terrestrial, glandular-hairy; leaves simple, toothed; fruits elongated, straight
Dontostemon
10.Plants aquatic, glabrous or sparsely hairy with simple hairs; leaves pinnate; fruits short, often slightly curved
Nasturtium
 
 
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