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Physaria cordiformis
Physaria cordiformis
Rollins
Family:
Brassicaceae
Images
not available
Flora of North America
Resources
Steve L. O´Kane Jr. in Flora of North America (vol. 7)
Perennials;
caudex simple or branched; densely pubescent, trichomes (short-stalked), several-rayed, rays furcate or bifurcate, (sometimes slightly umbonate, prominently tuberculate).
Stems
simple or few from base, prostrate to decumbent (arising laterally from a tuft of leaves, unbranched), 0.5-1.5 dm.
Basal leaves:
blade suborbicular, deltate to rhombic, or elliptic, margins entire or sparsely dentate, 2-4(-6) cm.
Cauline leaves
(shortly petiolate); blade oblanceolate to linear, 1-2(-3) cm, margins entire.
Racemes
loose, (sometimes elongated).
Fruiting pedicels
(sigmoid), 5-10 mm.
Flowers:
sepals lanceolate, 3.5-6(-8) mm; petals obovate to oblanceolate, (5-)7-8.5(-10) mm.
Fruits
obcordate to truncate or obcompressed, slightly compressed (angustiseptate, inflated at lobe tips), 3-6 mm (wider than long); valves densely pubescent, trichomes appressed or slightly spreading; (septum usually fenestrate); ovules 4-8 per ovary; style (slender), 3-6.5 mm, (often pubescent).
Seeds
flattened.
2
n
= 10. Flowering May-Aug. Dry sandy or gravelly soils, sagebrush, pinyon-juniper, and juniper communities, steep hillsides, rocky ridges, talus, whitish clay hills; 1500-2700 m; Calif., Idaho, Nev., Utah.
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