Overview
Taxonomy
The Family Cruciferae is further organized into finer groupings including:
- Subfamily (32): Agapanthoideae · Amaranthoideae · Asteroideae · Bombinae · Cactoideae · Caryophylloideae · Cichorioideae · Coliadinae · Epidendroideae · Ericoideae · Euphorbioideae · Faboideae · Fagoideae · Gesnerioideae · Iridoideae · Laricoideae · < a href="Larinae_Subfamily.asp">Larinae · Lilioideae · Magnolioideae · Nepetoideae · Olethreutinae · Polemonioideae · Pooideae · Pyroideae · Ranunculoideae · Rhinanthoideae · Rhododendroideae · Scrophularioideae · Spiraeoideae · Theoideae · Trollioideae · Vaccinioideae
- Tribe (31): Aethionemeae · Alysseae · Anchonieae · Anthemideae · Arabideae · Boechereae · Brassiceae · Camelineae · Cardamineae · Chorisporeae · Cochlearieae · Coreopsideae · Delphinieae · Descurainieae · Euclidieae · Eutremeae · Halimolobeae · Heliophil eae · Hesperideae · Iberideae · Irideae · Isatideae · Lepidieae · Noccaeeae · Physarieae · Rhododendreae · Schizopetaleae · Senecioneae · Sisymbrieae · Smelowskieae · Thlaspideae
- Subtribe (1): Senecioninae
- Genus (149): Aethionema · Alliara · Alliaria · Alyssum · Anastatica · Anchonium · Andrzeiowskia · Arabidopsis · Arabis · Armoracia · Asperuginoides · Athysanus · Aubrieta · Aurinia · Barbarea · Berteroa · Biscutella · Boechera · Boleum · Bornmuellera · Borodinia · Brassica · Braya · Brayopsis · Buchingera · Bunias · Cakile · Calepina · Camelina · Capsela · Capsella · Cardamine · Cardaminopsis · Cardaria · Caulanthus · Chamira · Cheiranthus · Chlorocrambe · Chorispora · Clypeola · Cochlearia · Coincya · Coluteocarpus · Conringia · Coronopus · Crambe · Cremolobus · Cycloptychis · Dentaria · Descuraina · Descurainia · Desideria · Didesmus · Didymophysa · Diplotaxis · Diptychocarpus · Draba · Drabopsis · Dryopetalon · Erophila · Eruca · Erucastrum · Erysimum · Euclidium · Eudema · Eunomia · Eutrema · Farsetia · Fibigia · Goldbachia · Halimolobos · Heliophila · Hemicrambe · Hesperis · Hirschfeldia · Hormatophylla · Hornungia · Hymenolobus · Iberia · Iberis · Ionopsidium · Isatis · Kernera · Lachnocapsa · Leavenworthia · Lepidium · Leptaleum · Litwinowia · Lobularia · Lunaria · Macropodium · Malcolmia · Malcomia · Mancoa · Megadenia · Meniocus · Menonvillea · Morettia · Moricandia · Morisia · Murbeckiella · Myagrum · Nasturtium · Neotorularia · Neslia · Nesocrambe · Noccaea · Ochtodium · Ornithocarpa · Pachyphragma · Parolinia · Parrya · Peltariopsis · Phlebolobium · Physaria · Physoptychis · Polypsecadium · Pringlea · Pseudovesicaria · Rapahnus · Raphanus · Rapistrum · Romanschulzia · Rorippa · Sameraria · Schivereckia · Schizopetalon · Sinapidendron · Sinapis · Sisymbrella · Sisymbrium · Smelowskia · Sobolewskia · Stanleya · Stenopetalum · Sterigmastemum · Sterigmostemum · Streptanthella · Streptanthus · Tauscheria · Tetracme · Thalspi · Thelypodiopsis · Thelypodium · Thlaspeocarpa · Thlaspi · Torularia · Warea · Weberbauera
- Species: ZipcodeZoo has pages for 13,398 species, subspecies, varieties, forms, and cultivars in the Family Cruciferae.
Genera
Aethionema
Aethionema is a genus of flowering plants, within the family Brassicaceae, subfamily . The genus is collectively known as the stonecresses. [more]
Alliara
Alliaria
Alliaria is a genus of flowering plants in the mustard family. [more]
Alyssum
Alyssum is a genus of about 100?170 species of flowering plants in the family Brassicaceae, native to Europe, Asia, and northern Africa, with the highest species diversity in the Mediterranean region. The genus comprises annual and perennial herbaceous plants or (rarely) small shrubs, growing to 10?100 cm tall, with oblong-oval leaves and yellow or white flowers (pink to purple in a few species). [more]
Anastatica
Anastatica is a monotypic genus with the type species Anastatica hierochuntica. The genus is a member of the family Brassicaceae (formerly Cruciferae), in the division Magnoliophyta of the class Magnoliopsida. The plant is a small gray annual herb that rarely grows above 15 centimetres (6 in) high, and bears minute white flowers. It is a tumbleweed and a resurrection plant. [more]
Anchonium
Andrzeiowskia
Arabidopsis
Arabis
Arabis (), or rockcress, is a genus of flowering plants, within the family Brassicaceae, subfamily Brassicoideae. [more]
Armoracia
Horseradish (Armoracia rusticana, syn. Cochlearia armoracia) is a perennial plant of the Brassicaceae family, which also includes mustard, wasabi, broccoli, and cabbages. The plant is probably native to south eastern Europe and western Asia, but is popular around the world today. It grows up to 1.5 metres (five feet) tall and is mainly cultivated for its large white, tapered root. [more]
Asperuginoides
Athysanus
Athysanus is a monotypic genus whose only species is Athysanus pusillus, the common sandweed. It is an annual herb with long, spindly stems on which grow small, unassuming white flowers. The tiny fruits that emerge from the flowers are flat, circular, green, and fringed with prominent white hairs. It is native to the western United States and into British Columbia. [more]
Aubrieta
Aubrieta (also Aubretia) is a genus of about 12 species of flowering plants in the cabbage family Brassicaceae. The genus is named after Claude Aubriet, a French flower-painter. It originates from southern Europe east to central Asia but is now a common garden escape throughout Europe. It is a low, spreading plant, hardy, evergreen and perennial, with small violet, pink or white flowers, and inhabits rocks and banks. It prefers light, well-drained soil, is tolerant of a wide pH range, and can grow in partial shade or full sun. [more]
Aurinia
Aurinia is a genus of flowering plant of the family Brassicaceae. [more]
Barbarea
Barbarea (, Winter cress or Yellow rocket) is a genus of about 22 species of flowering plants in the family Brassicaceae, native to temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere, with the highest species diversity in southern Europe and southwest Asia. [more]
Berteroa
Herbs annual or perennial. Trichomes stellate, mixed with simple ones. Stems erect or ascending, simple or branched. Basal leaves petiolate, not rosulate, simple, entire, dentate, or sinuate. Cauline leaves sessile, not auriculate, often entire. Racemes several flowered, dense, ebracteate. Fruiting pedicels slender, erect or divaricate. Sepals oblong, deciduous, suberect or spreading, pubescent, base of lateral pair not saccate. Petals white or rarely yellow, much longer than sepals; blade obcordate, apex deeply 2-fid; claw short. Stamens 6, tetradynamous; filaments of median pairs flattened basally, unappendaged or laterally 1-toothed; lateral pair with a basal toothlike appendage; anthers oblong, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 4; median glands absent; lateral glands 1 on each side of lateral stamen. Ovules 4-16 per ovary. Fruit dehiscent silicles, oblong, elliptic, ovate, obovate, or orbicular, latiseptate, sometimes slightly inflated, sessile; valves veinless or with an obscure midvein, stellate hairy or glabrous; replum rounded; septum complete, membranous; style to 4 mm, glabrous or sparsely pubescent; stigma capitate, obscurely 2-lobed. Seeds biseriate, winged, margined, or wingless, suborbicular or lenticular, plump or flattened; seed coat minutely reticulate, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons accumbent.[1] [more]
Biscutella
Biscutella is a genus of about 46 species of flowering plants of Brassicaceae or Cruciferae family, according to Appel, O. & Al-Shehbaz, I. 2003 . [more]
Boechera
Boechera (rockcress) is a of the family Brassicaceae, subfamily Brassicoideae. It was named after the Danish botanist Tyge W. Böcher (1909-1983), who was known for his research in alpine plants, including the mustards Draba and Boechera holboellii. According to recent molecular based studies Boechera is closely related to the genus Arabidopsis which also includes the widely known model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Until recently, members of this genus were included in the genus Arabis, but have been separated from that genus based on recent genetic and cytological data. Unlike the genus Arabis (x=8) Boechera has a base chromosome number of x=7. Many taxa are triploid. Boechera is a primarily North American genus, most diverse in the western United States but its distribution range also includes Greenland and the Russian Far East. The genus is poorly known, and species within are difficult to separate morphologically though some clearly distinct species are known. [more]
Boleum
Bornmuellera
Borodinia
Brassica
Brassica ( br?s-si-ca) is a genus of plants in the mustard family (Brassicaceae). The members of the genus are collectively known as cruciferous vegetables, cabbages, or mustards. Crops from this genus are sometimes called cole crops, which is derived from the Latin caulis, meaning stem or cabbage. [more]
Braya
Herbs perennial with simple or many-branched caudices, sometimes forming cushions. Trichomes simple or forked. Basal leaves petiolate, rosulate, simple, entire or dentate, rarely pinnately lobed, petiolar base persistent. Cauline leaves absent, rarely few, sessile or nearly so, not auriculate, entire or rarely dentate. Racemes ebracteate or only lowermost flowers bracteate, elongated or not in fruit. Fruiting pedicels erect or divaricate. Sepals ovate or oblong, caducous or persistent, erect, base of lateral pair not saccate, margin membranous. Petals white, pink, or purple, rarely yellow, longer than sepals; blade obovate or oblanceolate, apex obtuse or rounded; claw shorter than sepals. Stamens 6, tetradynamous; filaments dilated at base; anthers ovate or oblong, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 4, 1 on each side of lateral stamen; median glands absent. Ovules 4-26 per ovary. Fruit dehiscent siliques or silicles, linear, oblong, ovoid, or lanceolate, terete or slightly latiseptate, sessile; valves with a distinct midvein, glabrous or pubescent, smooth or torulose; replum rounded; septum complete, membranous, translucent; style obsolete or to 1 mm; stigma capitate, entire or slightly 2-lobed. Seeds uniseriate or rarely biseriate, wingless, oblong or ovoid, plump; seed coat minutely reticulate, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons incumbent.[2] [more]
Brayopsis
Buchingera
Bunias
Bunias is a genus in the Brassicaceae family. The genus includes only two accepted species, Bunias erucago (Crested warty cabbage, Corn rocket) and Bunias orientalis (Turkish rocket, Hill Mustard, Turkish warty cabbage, Warty cabbage). [more]
Cakile
Cakile () is a genus within the flowering plant family Brassicaceae. Species in this genus are commonly known as searockets, though this name on its own is applied particularly to whatever member of the species is native or most common in the region concerned, the European searocket Cakile maritima in Europe, and the American searocket C. edentula in North America. The genus is native to Europe, Asia and North America, but the European searocket has been introduced into North America and has spread widely on both east and west coasts; in many places it is replacing the native C. maritima, and is regarded as an undesirable invasive species. [more]
Calepina
Camelina
Camelina is a genus within the flowering plant family Brassicaceae. One species, Camelina sativa, is a historic and potentially important oil plant. [more]
Capsela
Capsella
The genus Capsella belongs to the Mustard family Brassicaceae. The most common species is Shepherd's Purse (Capsella bursa-pastoris). [more]
Cardamine
Cardamine (Car-d?-mi-ne, Bittercress or Bitter-cress), is a large genus in the family Brassicaceae. It contains more than 150 species of annuals and perennials. The genus grows worldwide in diverse habitats, except in the Antarctic. Genus Dentaria is a synonym for Cardamine. [more]
Cardaminopsis
Cardaria
Whitetop or hoary cress (Lepidium draba L. formerly Cardaria draba) is native to western Asia and eastern Europe and is an invasive species in North America, introduced by contanimated seeds in the early 1900s. [more]
Caulanthus
Caulanthus is a genus of plants in the . Plants of this genus may be known as jewelflowers. They are also often referred to as wild cabbage, although this common name usually refers to wild variants of Brassica oleraceae, the cabbage plant. Jewelflowers are native to the southwestern United States and northern Mexico, where they are often found in warm, arid regions. Many species have an enlarged, erect stem rising from a basal rosette of leaves. Flowers arise directly from the surface of the stem; many species have colorful, bell-shaped flowers. The best-known of the fourteen species is probably the desert candle. [more]
Chamira
Cheiranthus
Erysimum (wallflowers) is a genus that includes about 180 species, both popular garden plants and many wild forms. The genus Cheiranthus is sometimes included herein whole or in part. Erysimum has recently adscribed to a monogeneric cruciferous tribe, Erysimeae. This tribe is characterized by sessile, stellate and/or malpighiaceous trichomes, yellow to orange flowers and multiseeded siliques. [more]
Chlorocrambe
Chorispora
Herbs annual or perennial. Trichomes stalked, glandular, mixed with eglandular simple ones. Stems leafy or not. Basal leaves petiolate, rosulate or not, sinuate-dentate, pinnatifid, or pinnatisect, rarely entire. Cauline leaves absent or shortly petiolate, not auriculate, similar to basal ones. Racemes ebracteate, elongated in fruit, rarely flowers solitary on long pedicels from axils of rosette leaves. Sepals ovate, oblong, or linear, erect, base of lateral pair strongly saccate. Petals yellow or purple or lavender, much longer than sepals; blade broadly obovate, obcordate or rarely oblanceolate, apex emarginate or rarely obtuse; claws strongly differentiated from blade. Stamens 6, strongly tetradynamous; filaments not dilated at base; anthers narrowly oblong or linear, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 2 or 4, lateral, intrastaminal or 1 on each side of lateral stamen; median glands absent. Ovules (5-) 10-25(-30) per ovary. Fruit breaking into 1-seeded units, lomentaceous, linear, terete, sessile, slightly to strongly torulose or submoniliform; units indehiscent, with a thick corky or woody wall; replum flattened, persisting after segments fall off; septum becoming corky and splitting at middle; style 1.5-21 mm, beaklike; stigma conical, 2-lobed, lobes decurrent, strongly connivent. Seeds uniseriate, wingless, oblong; not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons accumbent.[3] [more]
Clypeola
Cochlearia
Scurvy-grass (Cochlearia species; a.k.a. Scurvy grass, Scurvygrass, or Spoonwort) is a genus of about 30 species of annual and perennial herbs in the cabbage family Brassicaceae. They are widely distributed in temperate and arctic areas of the northern hemisphere, most commonly found in coastal regions, on cliff-tops and salt marshes where their high tolerance of salt enables them to avoid competition from larger, but less salt-tolerant plants; they also occur in alpine habitats in mountains and tundra. [more]
Coincya
Coincya is a of flowering plant that belongs to the family Brassicaceae and is endemic to the British Isles. Only three species of plant belong to the genus, these being Coincya wrightii (Lundy Cabbage), Coincya cheiranthus (nokkasinapit) and Coincya monensis, which has two subspecies, C. monensis subsp. monensis (Isle of Man cabbage) and C. monensis subsp. recurvata (Star mustard). [more]
Coluteocarpus
Conringia
Herbs annual or rarely biennial, mostly glabrous throughout, usually glaucous. Trichomes absent or rarely as minute papillae on pedicels. Stems erect, simple. Basal leaves subsessile, subfleshy, not rosulate, simple, entire. Cauline leaves sessile, cordate-amplexicaul or rarely auriculate at base, entire. Racemes ebracteate, elongated in fruit. Fruiting pedicels slender or thick and as wide as fruit, erect or divaricate. Sepals oblong or linear, erect or ascending, base of lateral pair not saccate or strongly saccate. Petals yellow or white, rarely with purple veins, longer than sepals; blade obovate, oblong, or oblanceolate, apex obtuse; claw somewhat differentiated from blade. Stamens 6, tetradynamous; filaments not dilated at base; anthers narrowly oblong, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 2, lateral, semiannular, rarely 1 and confluent; median glands absent or rarely present. Ovules 10-50 per ovary. Fruit dehiscent siliques, linear, terete, 4- or 8-angled, or latiseptate; valves veinless or prominently veined, smooth or torulose; replum rounded; septum complete; style to 1.5 mm; stigma capitate, entire or decurrently 2-lobed. Seeds uniseriate, wingless, oblong or elliptic, plump; seed coat reticulate, mucilaginous or not when wetted; cotyledons incumbent or rarely subconduplicate.[4] [more]
Coronopus
Crambe
Crambe is a genus of Brassicaceae native to Europe, southwest and central Asia and eastern Africa. It includes among its species seakale (Crambe maritima), grown as a leaf vegetable, Crambe cordifolia which is grown as an herbaceous border perennial, and Crambe abyssinica, which is grown for an oil from the seeds that has similar characteristics to whale oil. [more]
Cremolobus
Cycloptychis
Dentaria
Cardamine (Car-d?-mi-ne, Bittercress or Bitter-cress), is a large genus in the family Brassicaceae. It contains more than 150 species of annuals and perennials. The genus grows worldwide in diverse habitats, except in the Antarctic. Genus Dentaria is a synonym for Cardamine. [more]
Descuraina
Descurainia
Descurainia is a genus of plants in the mustard family which are known commonly as the tansymustards. They are similar in appearance to other mustards, sending up long erect stems and bearing small yellow or whitish flowers. Many species are noxious weeds. Some species are toxic to livestock and become a nuisance when they grow in grazing fields. Plants of this genus are found worldwide in temperate regions. [more]
Desideria
Herbs perennial, with a slender, rhizomelike caudex. Trichomes simple or mixed with short-stalked, forked ones. Stems simple, leafy or leafless, sometimes absent. Basal leaves petiolate, rosulate, simple, 3-9(-11) -toothed, rarely subentire, often palmately veined. Cauline leaves absent or similar to basal ones, entire or toothed, subsessile or petiolate. Racemes 3-30-flowered, bracteate or ebracteate, sometimes flowers solitary on pedicels originating from basal rosette. Sepals ovate or oblong, free or united, caducous or persistent, erect, base of lateral pair not saccate. Petals purple, purple-green, or rarely white, sometimes yellowish at base of blade; blade obovate or spatulate, apex obtuse or subemarginate; claw subequaling or longer than sepals. Stamens 6, tetradynamous; filaments wingless or rarely winged and toothed, dilated at base; anthers ovate or oblong, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 2 and lateral, or confluent and subtending bases of all stamens; median glands present or absent. Ovules 10-70 per ovary. Fruit dehiscent siliques, linear or lanceolate, latiseptate, rectangular in cross section, sessile; valves papery, with a prominent midvein and distinct marginal veins, not torulose, apex persistently united with replum; replum rounded; septum complete, perforated, or reduced to a rim, translucent, or absent; style obsolete; stigma capitate, 2-lobed or rarely subentire. Seeds uniseriate or biseriate, wingless, oblong or ovate, often flattened; seed coat minutely reticulate, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons accumbent.[6] [more]
Didesmus
Didymophysa
Diplotaxis
The scientific name Diplotaxis may refer to: [more]
Diptychocarpus
Herbs annual. Trichomes eglandular, simple, mixed with glandular ones. Stems erect, simple basally, often branched above. Basal leaves petiolate, not rosulate, sinuate-dentate, dentate, or rarely pinnatisect. Cauline leaves similar to basal ones, uppermost entire, subsessile. Racemes few flowered, ebracteate, elongated in fruit. Fruiting pedicels thickened, ascending or subdivaricate. Sepals oblong-linear, connivent, erect, base of lateral pair saccate. Petals purple or whitish, longer than sepals; blade linear-oblanceolate, apex obtuse; claw obscurely differentiated from blade. Stamens 6, erect, tetradynamous; filaments not dilated at base; anthers ovate, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 4, lateral, 1 on each side of lateral stamen; median glands absent. Ovules 10-40 per ovary. Fruit dimorphic siliques, linear, sessile, torulose, glabrous; lowermost fruit indehiscent, terete, corky, breaking into 1-seeded units; upper fruit dehiscent, latiseptate, with obscurely veined leathery valves; replum rounded; septum corky in lower fruit, opaque, complete, and veinless in upper ones; style to 8 mm, stout, cylindric or subconical; stigma capitate, 2-lobed, lobes connivent. Seeds uniseriate, broadly winged, oblong or orbicular, strongly flattened; seed coat smooth, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons accumbent.[7] [more]
Draba
Draba is a large genus of cruciferous plants, commonly known as Whitlow-grasses. There are over 300 species. [more]
Drabopsis
Herbs annual, scapose. Trichomes stalked, 3- or 4-rayed stellate, sometimes forked or simple at leaf margin and on sepals. Basal leaves sessile or subsessile, rosulate, simple, entire or rarely few toothed. Cauline leaves absent. Racemes few to several flowered, ebracteate. Fruiting pedicels stout, often as thick as fruit, suberect or divaricate-ascending. Sepals oblong, erect, glabrous or pubescent, base of lateral pair not saccate. Petals yellow or yellowish white, ascending, slightly longer than sepals; blade oblanceolate, apex obtuse or retuse; claw obscurely differentiated from blade. Stamens 6, erect, tetradynamous; filaments not dilated at base; anthers ovate, obtuse at apex. Median glands absent; lateral glands 1 on each side of lateral stamen. Ovules 12-40 per ovary. Fruit dehiscent siliques, linear, latiseptate, sessile; valves with a prominent midvein, glabrous or rarely pubescent with stalked, forked and 3-rayed trichomes, smooth; replum rounded; septum complete; style obsolete or to 0.2 mm; stigma capitate, entire. Seeds uniseriate, wingless, oblong, flattened; seed coat minutely reticulate, slightly mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons accumbent.[8] [more]
Dryopetalon
Erophila
Eruca
Eruca is a genus of flowering plants in the family Brassicaceae, native to the Mediterranean region. [more]
Erucastrum
Erucastrum is a genus of flowering plant in the mustard family. There are approximately 18 species. Erucastrum species are known generally as dogmustards. [more]
Erysimum
The genus Erysimum (wallflowers) includes more than 220 species, both popular garden plants and many wild forms. They are small, annual, short-lived perennial herbs or sub-shrubs, reaching 10-130 cm tall, with bright yellow to red or pink flowers produced throughout the spring and summer. One species, Erysimum semperflorens, native to Morocco and Algeria, has white flowers. Wallflowers have t-shaped trichomes. [more]
Euclidium
Herbs annual. Trichomes unicellular, eglandular, simple and stalked forked, in different sizes, some subsetose. Stems erect or ascending, simple or branched. Basal leaves petiolate, not rosulate, simple, entire, dentate, or rarely pinnatifid, often withered by flowering. Cauline leaves similar to basal, entire or dentate, reduced in size upward. Racemes ebracteate, elongated in fruit. Fruiting pedicels stout, thickened, erect, appressed to rachis. Sepals oblong, erect, base of lateral pair not saccate. Petals white, slightly longer than sepals; blade narrowly spatulate, apex emarginate; claw slightly differentiated from blade, shorter than sepals. Stamens 6, slightly tetradynamous; filaments not dilated at base; anthers ovate, apiculate at apex. Nectar glands 4, lateral, 1 on each side of lateral stamen; median glands absent. Ovules 2 per ovary, subapical. Fruit indehiscent, nutletlike silicles, ovoid, slightly 4-angled, sessile; valves thickened, woody, veinless, rough pubescent; replum strongly expanded laterally; septum complete, thickened; style to 1.8 mm, stout, subconical, curved, persistent; stigma capitate, 2-lobed, lobes not decurrent. Seeds wingless, oblong, plump; seed coat smooth, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons accumbent or obliquely so.[9] [more]
Eudema
Eudema is a genus of in the Brassicaceae family. It contains the following species: [more]
Eunomia
Eutrema
Herbs perennial, rhizomatous or with a caudex. Trichomes absent or simple. Stems erect, ascending, or decumbent, simple or branched apically. Basal leaves petiolate, rosulate, simple, entire or palmately lobed, palmately veined. Cauline leaves petiolate or sessile and cuneate or auriculate, pinnately or palmately veined, entire, dentate, or crenate; ultimate veins ending or not with apiculate callosities. Racemes ebracteate or rarely bracteate throughout, elongated considerably or not elongated in fruit. Sepals ovate or oblong, base of lateral pair not saccate. Petals white or rarely pink; blade spatulate or rarely obovate, apex obtuse; claw absent. Stamens 6, slightly tetradynamous; filaments slightly dilated at base; anthers ovate or oblong, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands confluent and subtending bases of all stamens; median glands present. Ovules 2-10 per ovary. Fruit dehiscent, siliques or silicles, linear, oblong, ovoid, or lanceolate, terete or slightly 4-angled, sessile or shortly stipitate; valves with an obscure or prominent midvein, smooth or torulose; replum rounded; septum complete or perforated, translucent, veinless; style obsolete or distinct and to 3 mm; stigma capitate, entire. Seeds uniseriate, wingless, oblong, plump; seed coat obscurely reticulate, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons incumbent.[10] [more]
Farsetia
Farsetia is a genus of in the Brassicaceae family. It contains the following species: [more]
Fibigia
Goldbachia
Herbs annual. Trichomes absent or eglandular, simple. Stems erect, branched. Basal leaves petiolate, rosulate or not, entire, dentate, or lyrately pinnatifid. Cauline leaves sessile, auriculate or amplexicaul at base, rarely not auriculate, entire, repand, or dentate. Racemes ebracteate, elongated in fruit. Fruiting pedicels filiform, recurved or reflexed, articulate at base or both ends. Sepals ovate or oblong, suberect, base of lateral pair not saccate or subsaccate. Petals white, pink, or purplish, longer than sepals; blade spatulate, apex obtuse; claw subequaling sepals. Stamens 6, slightly tetradynamous; median filament pairs flattened at base, lateral pair filiform; anthers ovate, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 4, minute; median glands free or confluent with laterals; lateral glands semiannular, intrastaminal. Ovules 1-3 per ovary, subapical. Fruit indehiscent nutletlike silicle, often breaking into 1-seeded units, oblong, ovoid, or ellipsoid, 1-loculed or transversely 2- or 3-loculed, terete or 4-angled, sessile, woody, often prominently veined, glabrous or papillate, smooth or torulose, sometimes verrucose-reticulate; replum rounded; septum absent; style absent, obsolete, or distinct, thickened and subconical; stigma capitate, entire. Seeds uniseriate, wingless, oblong, plump; seed coat smooth, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons incumbent.[11] [more]
Halimolobos
Heliophila
Club-pointed Heliophila (Heliophila coronopifolia) is the only member of the Heliophila within the flowering plant in the Brassicaceae family. In addition, some species of this genus are used like a ornamental plants. [more]
Hemicrambe
Hemicrambe is a genus of in the Brassicaceae family. It contains the following species: [more]
Hesperis
Dame’s Rocket, also known as Damask Violet, Dame’s Violet, Dames-wort, Dame’s Gilliflower, Night Scented Gilliflower, Queen’s Gilliflower, Rogue’s Gilliflower, Summer Lilac, Sweet Rocket, Mother-of-the-evening and, Winter Gilliflower (Hesperis matronalis) is a herbaceous perennial plant belonging to the mustard family, Brassicaceae. A native of Eurasia once cultivated and enjoyed as a traditional garden plant, Dame's Rocket was brought to North America in the 17th century and has since become naturalized there. [more]
Hirschfeldia
Hormatophylla
Hornungia
Herbs perennial with a branched caudex, or annual. Trichomes absent or minutely branched and subsessile mixed with simple ones. Stems erect, ascending, decumbent, or procumbent. Basal leaves rosulate or not, pinnatisect, sometimes dentate or entire. Cauline leaves petiolate, base cuneate or attenuate, pinnatisect, pinnatifid, dentate, or entire, or absent. Racemes few to many flowered, ebracteate. Fruiting pedicels divaricate. Sepals ovate or oblong, spreading or reflexed, glabrous or puberulent, base of lateral pair not saccate. Petals white, spreading, longer or shorter than sepals; blade obovate, oblong, or oblanceolate, apex obtuse or rounded; claw absent. Stamens 6 and subtetradynamous, rarely 4, erect or slightly spreading; filaments often dilated at base; anthers ovate, obtuse at apex. Median glands present or absent; lateral glands 1 on each side of lateral stamen. Ovules 4-20 per ovary. Fruit dehiscent silicles, oblong, ovate, suborbicular, elliptic, or lanceolate, angustiseptate, sessile; valves with a prominent midvein, glabrous, keeled; replum rounded; septum complete; style obsolete or rarely to 0.5 mm; stigma capitate, entire. Seeds biseriate or aseriate when few, wingless, oblong, plump; seed coat obscurely reticulate, mucilaginous or not when wetted; cotyledons incumbent or rarely accumbent.[12] [more]
Hymenolobus
Iberia
Iberis
Iberis is a genus of flowering plant belonging to the family Brassicaceae. It comprises herbs and subshrubs of the Old World. These species are commonly known as candytufts. Used in Homeopathy for nervousness and muscle soreness. According to the US Dispensatory (1918)the leaves, stem, and root are said to possess medicinal properties, but the seeds are most efficacious. The plant appears to have been employed by the ancients in rheumatism, gout, and other diseases. In large doses it is said to produce giddiness, nausea, and diarrhea, and to be useful in cardiac hypertrophy, asthma, and bronchitis in doses of from one to three grains (0.065--0.2 Gm.) of the seed. Currently the foliage and stalks are employed in German Phytomedicine as a bitter digestive tonic. [more]
Ionopsidium
Ionopsidium (syn. Cochlearia Tourn) is a genus of the botanical family Brassicaceae, endemic to the western Mediterranean region. [more]
Isatis
Isatis is the ancient name of Yazd , a city in Iran. [more]
Kernera
Lachnocapsa
Lachnocapsa is a genus of in the Brassicaceae family. It contains the following species: [more]
Leavenworthia
Lepidium
Lepidium, commonly known as the peppergrasses or pepperworts, is a genus of plants in the mustard family Brassicaceae. It includes about 175 species found worldwide, including cress and pepperweed. [more]
Leptaleum
Herbs annual, puberulent. Trichomes short-stalked or subsessile, 1-3-forked or submalpighiaceous, sometimes also simple. Stems decumbent or erect, branched basally and apically, rarely simple from base. Basal leaves petiolate, not rosulate, simple, entire or pinnatisect into filiform segments. Cauline leaves similar to basal ones. Racemes 2-4-flowered, ebracteate, axillary, not elongated in fruit, sometimes flowers solitary and axillary. Fruiting pedicels slender or thickened, erect or ascending. Sepals linear-oblong or linear, erect, base of lateral pair not saccate. Petals white or pink; blade linear to linear-oblanceolate, apex obtuse; claw subequaling or shorter than sepals. Stamens 6, in 2 unequal pairs; filaments of median pairs connate to apex, rarely only basally, not dilated at base; anthers oblong, obtuse at apex, those of connate stamens sometimes 1-lobed. Nectar glands 4, 1 on each side of lateral filament; median glands absent. Ovules numerous per ovary. Fruit indehiscent or very tardily dehiscent siliques, linear, latiseptate, rarely subterete, often distinctly grooved at replum, sessile; valves thick leathery, with a prominent midvein and reticulate lateral veins, puberulent or glabrous, smooth; replum rounded; septum complete, thickened; style absent or obsolete; stigma conical, 2-lobed. Seeds biseriate, wingless, ovoid or suboblong, plump; seed coat smooth, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons incumbent.[13] [more]
Litwinowia
Herbs annual. Trichomes unicellular, eglandular, simple, mixed with much fewer and smaller, glandular, multicellular ones with multiseriate stalk. Stems erect, simple or branched above. Basal leaves petiolate, not rosulate, simple, pinnatifid, dentate, or rarely entire, often withered by flowering. Cauline leaves petiolate or subsessile, entire or dentate. Racemes ebracteate, elongated in fruit. Fruiting pedicels slender, ascending, articulate at rachis. Sepals oblong, erect, base of lateral pair not saccate. Petals white or purplish, longer than sepals; blade narrowly spatulate or oblong, apex obtuse; claw subequaling sepals. Stamens 6, slightly tetradynamous; filaments flattened at base; anthers ovate, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 6; lateral semiannular; median very small, 1 facing each median filament. Ovules 2 per ovary, subapical. Fruit indehiscent, nutletlike silicles, globose, terete, sessile; valves thickened, woody, prominently veined, vesicular papillate; replum strongly expanded laterally; septum complete, thickened, opaque, veinless; style prominent and to 3.5 mm, slender, cylindric, articulated at base, straight, caducous, glabrous; stigma capitate, entire. Seeds wingless, orbicular, strongly flattened; seed coat reticulate, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons accumbent.[14] [more]
Lobularia
Lobularia is a genus of four or five species of flowering plants in the family Brassicaceae, closely related to (and formerly often included in) the genus Alyssum. [more]
Lunaria
Lunaria is a of flowering plants in the family Brassicaceae, native to central and southern Europe. It includes two[verification needed] species, Perennial honesty and Annual honesty. They are widely grown as ornamental plants in gardens, and have become naturalised in many temperate areas away from their native habitat. [more]
Macropodium
Herbs perennial, rhizomatous, puberulent. Trichomes simple and minutely forked. Stems erect, unbranched. Basal leaves long petiolate, rosulate, simple, entire, serrate, or denticulate. Cauline leaves petiolate, uppermost sessile, not auriculate, entire or serrate. Racemes numerous flowered, dense, ebracteate or rarely lowermost few flowers bracteate, elongated in fruit. Fruiting pedicels slender or thickened, divaricate. Sepals oblong-linear, base of lateral pair not saccate, margin narrowly membranous. Petals white; blade linear-oblong or linear-lanceolate, apex obtuse; claw shorter than sepals. Stamens 6, distinctly exserted, subequal in length; filaments dilated at base, filiform; anthers oblong-linear, twisted after dehiscence, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 2, lateral, semiannular or annular; median glands absent. Ovules 8-22 per ovary. Fruit dehiscent siliques, linear, strongly latiseptate; valves papery, with a prominent midvein and distinct lateral veins, glabrous, torulose; gynophore 0.3-3 cm; replum rounded; septum complete, membranous, translucent, veinless; style obsolete, rarely to 1 mm, subconical; stigma capitate, entire. Seeds uniseriate, winged, ovate or orbicular, strongly flattened; seed coat smooth, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons accumbent.[15] [more]
Malcolmia
Malcolmia is a genus from the family Brassicaceae. Species from this genus are native to Europe and Africa. [more]
Malcomia
Mancoa
Megadenia
Herbs annual, sometimes perennial from slender, deeply buried rhizomes. Trichomes absent. Stems absent or rarely developed. Basal leaves long petiolate, rosulate, simple, entire or repand, palmately 3-5-veined. Cauline leaves absent, rarely present and similar to basal ones. Racemes absent and all flowers on pedicels from basal rosette, if present then few flowered, bracteate throughout. Fruiting pedicels erect-ascending or divaricate, recurved. Sepals ovate, base of lateral pair not saccate, margin not membranous. Petals white, slightly longer than sepals; blade obovate, oblong-obovate, or spatulate, apex obtuse; claw absent. Stamens 6, subequal; filaments not dilated at base; anthers orbicular, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 4, 1 on each side of lateral stamen; median glands absent. Ovules 2 per ovary. Fruit indehiscent, schizocarpic, didymous, angustiseptate silicles, sessile; valves (mericarps) transversely ovate or sublenticular, 1-seeded, woody, reticulate, keeled all around; replum rounded; septum complete, thickened, opaque, veinless; style slender, to 0.3 mm; stigma capitate, entire. Seeds wingless, broadly ovate, plump or slightly flattened; seed coat smooth, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons accumbent.[16] [more]
Meniocus
Menonvillea
Morettia
Moricandia
Moricandia is a genus of plants belonging to the family . Moricandia ramburii commonly known as violet cabbage, a native of the Mediterranean, is cultivated as a garden flower. [more]
Morisia
Murbeckiella
Myagrum
Nasturtium
Nasturtium (literally "nose-twister" or "nose-tweaker"), as a common name, refers to a genus of roughly 80 species of annual and perennial herbaceous flowering plants Tropaeolum ("Trophy"), one of three genera in the family Tropaeolaceae. It should not be confused with the Watercresses of the genus Nasturtium, of the Mustard family. This genus, native to South and Central America, includes several very popular garden plants, the most commonly grown being T. majus, T. peregrinum and T. speciosum. The hardiest species is T. polyphyllum from Chile, the perennial roots of which can survive underground when air temperatures drop as low as -15°C (5°F). [more]
Neotorularia
Herbs annual, biennial, or perennial with a woody caudex. Trichomes stalked or subsessile, 1- or 2-forked sometimes also simple. Stems erect or prostrate, usually several from base. Basal leaves petiolate or sessile, rosulate or not, entire, dentate, or pinnatisect. Cauline leaves often similar to basal ones, rarely absent. Racemes few to several flowered, ebracteate or rarely bracteate. Fruiting pedicels erect, ascending, or divaricate. Sepals ovate or oblong, erect or spreading, rarely reflexed, glabrous or pubescent, base of lateral pair not saccate. Petals white or pink, sometimes yellowish, longer or rarely shorter than sepals; blade obovate, spatulate, or oblanceolate, apex obtuse or retuse; claw distinct or not. Stamens 6, tetradynamous; filaments rarely dilated at base; anthers ovate or narrowly oblong, apex apiculate or obtuse. Median glands absent; lateral ones semilunar or 1 on each side of lateral stamen. Ovules (8-) 16-36(-44) per ovary. Fruit dehiscent siliques, linear or rarely linear-oblong, terete or 4-angled, sessile; valves with branched trichomes sometimes mixed with simple ones, rarely glabrescent, torulose; replum rounded; septum complete; style obsolete or to 1 mm; stigma capitate, entire or 2-lobed. Seeds uniseriate, wingless, oblong or ovate, plump; seed coat reticulate, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons incumbent.[17] [more]
Neslia
Herbs annual. Trichomes short-stalked, forked or substellate, mixed on stem with simple ones. Stems erect, simple basally, branched above. Basal leaves shortly petiolate, not rosulate, simple, entire or dentate. Cauline leaves sessile, sagittate or auriculate, entire or denticulate. Racemes ebracteate, elongated considerably in fruit. Fruiting pedicels slender, divaricate. Sepals oblong, erect, base of lateral pair not saccate. Petals yellow, longer than sepals; blade spatulate, apex obtuse. Stamens 6, slightly tetradynamous; filaments not dilated at base; anthers ovate, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 2 or 4; median glands absent; lateral glands semiannular or 1 on each side of lateral stamen. Ovules 2-4 per ovary. Fruit indehiscent, nutletlike silicles, compressed globose or sublenticular, 1-seeded, shortly stipitate, readily detached from pedicel at maturity; valves woody, prominently reticulate; replum rounded, obscured by valve margin; septum complete, membranous; style less than 1 mm, cylindric, readily caducous at fruit maturity; stigma capitate, entire. Seeds wingless, ovoid, plump; seed coat minutely reticulate, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons incumbent.[18] [more]
Nesocrambe
Nesocrambe is a genus of in the Brassicaceae family. It contains the following species: [more]
Noccaea
Ochtodium
Ornithocarpa
Pachyphragma
Parolinia
Parrya
Herbs perennial, with well-developed caudex, rarely subshrubs or shrubs. Trichomes simple or absent, multicellular glands present or absent. Stems leafy or leafless. Basal leaves petiolate, rosulate, simple, entire, dentate, or pinnately dissected. Cauline leaves similar to basal, often absent. Racemes ebracteate, elongated in fruit. Fruiting pedicels erect, ascending, or divaricate. Sepals linear or oblong, caducous, erect, unequal, base of lateral pair saccate, margin membranous. Petals purple, pink, or white; blade obovate, apex rounded or emarginate; claw subequaling or longer than sepals. Stamens 6, tetradynamous; filaments dilated or not at base; anthers oblong or linear, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 2, lateral, annular to semiannular; median glands absent. Ovules 10-50 per ovary. Fruit dehiscent siliques, linear, oblong, or lanceolate, strongly latiseptate or rarely subterete or 4-angled, sessile or subsessile, persistently attached to pedicel, unsegmented; valves leathery, with a prominent midvein and obscure to distinct lateral and marginal veins, smooth or torulose; replum almost always flattened; septum complete, membranous or thickened, translucent or opaque; style distinct, 0.5-7 mm; stigma conical or cylindric, 2-lobed, lobes prominent, connate, decurrent. Seeds uniseriate, often broadly winged, suborbicular or oblong, strongly flattened; seed coat smooth, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons accumbent.[19] [more]
Peltariopsis
Phlebolobium
Phlebolobium maclovianum, the rock-cress, is a species of in the Brassicaceae family. It is endemic to the Falkland Islands. Its natural habitat is temperate shrubland. It is threatened by habitat loss. [more]
Physaria
Physoptychis
Polypsecadium
Pringlea
Pseudovesicaria
Rapahnus
Raphanus
Raphanus is a genus within the flowering plant family Brassicaceae. Two or three species are currently classified in Raphanus. They include the cultivated radish, Raphanus sativus and the common wild radish or jointed charlock, R. raphanistrum. Some authors accept the podding or rattail radish, R. caudatus as a third member of the genus, while others treat it as a variety of R. sativus. Substantial numbers of other species in the genus have been proposed at various times, but almost all are currently regarded as varieties of R. sativus, while a few are treated as varieties of R. raphanistrum or are not accepted as well-described species. Examples are R. raphanistrum ssp. landra and R. raphanistrum ssp. maritimus (Sea Radish). [more]
Rapistrum
Romanschulzia
Rorippa
Rorippa is a flowering plant genus in the cabbage family (Brassicaceae), containing approximately 80 species native to Europe through central Asia, Africa, and North America. Rorippa species are annual to perennial herbs, usually with yellow flowers and a peppery flavour. [more]
Sameraria
Schivereckia
Schizopetalon
Schizopetalon (syn. Schizopetalum Sims) is a genus of the botanical family Brassicaceae. [more]
Sinapidendron
Sinapis
Sinapis is a genus of plants in the family Brassicaceae. One of the species in this genus is White mustard (S. alba). Black mustard is sometimes placed in this genus as well, but is more often placed in the related genus Brassica. The leaves are a great delicacy in North Indian Cuisine. [more]
Sisymbrella
Sisymbrium
Sisymbrium is a genus of plants in the cabbage family, Brassicaceae. [more]
Smelowskia
Herbs perennial, often pulvinate, with well-developed caudex covered with petioles of previous years. Trichomes dendritic, sometimes mixed with simple and forked stalked ones. Stems erect or ascending, several from caudex, simple or branched apically. Basal leaves petiolate, rosulate, simple, 1- or rarely 2-pinnatisect, sometimes entire, densely pubescent. Cauline leaves shortly petiolate or sessile, not auriculate, entire or pinnatisect. Racemes ebracteate or basally bracteate, elongated in fruit. Fruiting pedicels suberect, ascending, or divaricate. Sepals ovate or oblong, ascending or spreading, base of lateral pair not saccate. Petals white, creamy white, or purplish, longer than sepals; blade suborbicular, obovate, or spatulate, apex rounded; claw subequaling or longer than sepals. Stamens 6, tetradynamous; filaments dilated at base; anthers ovate or oblong, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands confluent and subtending bases of all stamens. Ovules 6-30 per ovary. Fruit dehiscent siliques or silicles, linear, oblong, ovoid, obovoid, ellipsoid, or lanceolate, terete or slightly 4-angled, sometimes angustiseptate; valves with a prominent midvein, smooth; replum rounded; septum complete or perforated; style absent or short and to 1.5 mm; stigma capitate, entire. Seeds uniseriate, wingless, oblong, plump; seed coat minutely reticulate, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons incumbent.[20] [more]
Sobolewskia
Stanleya
Stanleya is the name of two genera: [more]
Stenopetalum
Sterigmastemum
Sterigmostemum
Herbs annual, biennial, or perennial, or subshrubs. Trichomes dendritic, sometimes mixed with fewer simple and stalked forked ones; glandular trichomes multicellular, multiseriate. Stems erect, simple or branched. Basal leaves petiolate, rosulate, simple, pinnatifid, pinnatisect, or runcinate, rarely sinuate or subentire. Cauline leaves petiolate, similar to basal, often less divided upward. Racemes ebracteate, elongated in fruit. Fruiting pedicels slender, rarely thickened, divaricate or erect-ascending. Sepals oblong, ascending, equal, base of lateral pair not saccate. Petals yellow or orange, rarely white or purplish; blade broadly obovate, apex rounded; claw not differentiated from blade. Stamens 6, strongly tetradynamous; filaments of median pairs connate or rarely free, dilated at base; anthers oblong, obtuse at apex. Nectar glands 2, lateral, annular; median glands absent. Ovules 10-40 per ovary. Fruit indehiscent or tardily dehiscent, often lomentaceous siliques, breaking transversely into 1(or 2) -seeded units, linear or oblong, terete, sessile; valves thickened, obscurely veined, glabrous or with glandular and/or dendritic trichomes, torulose or rarely moniliform; replum rounded; septum complete, thickened, opaque, veinless; style prominent or short or obsolete; stigma capitate, strongly 2-lobed, lobes spreading, free, not decurrent. Seeds uniseriate, wingless, oblong, slightly flattened; seed coat not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons incumbent.[21] [more]
Streptanthella
Streptanthus
Streptanthus is a genus within the mustard family, Brassicaceae. There are about 35 known species within the Streptanthus genus, distributed mostly throughout western North America. The common names for this genus are Jewelflower and Twistflower. Twenty-four of the species and eleven lesser taxa occur in California, thirty-two of which are California endemics; seventeen of these California taxa are classified as rare plants. [more]
Tauscheria
Tetracme
Herbs annual, canescent. Trichomes stalked, stellate or dendritic, rarely mixed with fewer, simple or forked, subsetose ones. Stems often several branched basally. Basal leaves petiolate, not rosulate, simple, entire, sinuate-dentate, or pinnatipartite. Cauline leaves similar to basal. Racemes ebracteate, corymbose, elongated in fruit. Fruiting pedicels slender or thickened and nearly as wide as fruit base, erect or ascending. Sepals ovate, ascending, base of lateral pair not saccate, margin membranous. Petals white, subequaling or much longer than sepals; blade obovate, spatulate, or oblanceolate, apex obtuse; claw distinct or undifferentiated from blade. Stamens 6, slightly tetradynamous; filaments dilated at base; anthers ovate, apiculate at apex. Nectar glands 4, lateral, 1 on each side of lateral filament; median glands absent. Ovules 2-14 per ovary. Fruit dehiscent siliques or indehiscent silicles, linear, oblong, or ovoid, strongly latiseptate, terete, or 4-angled, sessile; valves obscurely veined, tomentose, smooth or torulose, subapically 4-horned; replum flattened; septum complete, membranous; style absent, obsolete, or distinct; stigma capitate, entire. Seeds uniseriate, wingless, oblong, plump; seed coat smooth, not mucilaginous when wetted; cotyledons incumbent.[23] [more]
Thalspi
Thelypodiopsis
Thelypodium
Thlaspeocarpa
Thlaspi
Thlaspi are a genus of herbs of temperate regions. The rare species T. perfoliatum occurs primarily in Oxfordshire, England and is protected under the UK Biodiversity Action Plan. [more]
Torularia
Warea
A Genus in the Kingdom Plantae. [more]
Weberbauera
At least 24 species and subspecies belong to the Genus Weberbauera.
More info about the Genus Weberbauera may be found here.
Footnotes
- "Berteroa". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 65. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- Tai-yien Cheo, Lianli Lu, Guang Yang, Ihsan Al-Shehbaz & Vladimir Dorofeev "Braya". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 186. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Chorispora". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 147. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Conringia". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 27. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- Tai-yien Cheo, Lianli Lu, Guang Yang, Ihsan Al-Shehbaz & Vladimir Dorofeev "Coronopus". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 33. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- Tai-yien Cheo, Lianli Lu, Guang Yang, Ihsan Al-Shehbaz & Vladimir Dorofeev "Desideria". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 128. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- Tai-yien Cheo, Lianli Lu, Guang Yang, Ihsan Al-Shehbaz & Vladimir Dorofeev "Diptychocarpus". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 149. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- Tai-yien Cheo, Lianli Lu, Guang Yang, Ihsan Al-Shehbaz & Vladimir Dorofeev "Drabopsis". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 126. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Euclidium". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 57. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Eutrema". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 174. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Goldbachia". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 161. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Hornungia". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 44. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Leptaleum". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 154. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Litwinowia". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 57. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Macropodium". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 16. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- Tai-yien Cheo, Lianli Lu, Guang Yang, Ihsan Al-Shehbaz & Vladimir Dorofeev "Megadenia". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 40. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Neotorularia". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 182. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Neslia". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 58. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Parrya". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 150. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Smelowskia". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 191. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- "Sterigmostemum". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 159. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- Tai-yien Cheo, Lianli Lu, Guang Yang, Ihsan Al-Shehbaz & Vladimir Dorofeev "Tauscheria". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 56. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
- Tai-yien Cheo, Lianli Lu, Guang Yang, Ihsan Al-Shehbaz & Vladimir Dorofeev "Tetracme". in Flora of China Vol. 8 Page 144. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
Sources
- The text on this page is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
- Photographs on this page are copyrighted by individual photographers, and individual copyrights apply.
- The technology underlying this page, including the controls behind Keep Exploring, is owned by the BayScience Foundation. All rights are reserved.
