Description
Key Characters:
Growth Form:
Annual, biennial, or perennial herbs, occasionally shrubs.
Stems:
Roots:
Leaves:
Leaves simple.
Alternate or rarely opposite.
Margins entire to lobed or pinnately divided.
Petiolate, sessile, or subsessile.
Stipules absent.
Flowers:
Flowers in usually bractless, terminal racemes, occasionally solitary.
Flowers bisexual (perfect), actinomorphic or rarely slightly irregular.
Calyx of 4 sepals, deciduous, erect, usually oblong, sometimes the inner 2 with gibbous bases that hold the nectar.
Corolla of 4 petals, rarely absent, yellow, white, or lavender, entire to emarginate, rarely lobed or fimbriate, usually with an elongate claw.
Stamens (2–4)6(–16), tetradynamous, the inner 4 usually in pairs, sometimes connate at base in pairs; anthers dithecal, opening by longitudinal slits.
Ovary superior, 2(4?)-carpellate, usually 2-celled by means of a false, but usually complete septum, rarely 1-celled, sessile or rarely stipitate; ovules 1 to numerous, borne on parietal placentas on replum margin at periphery of ovary wall, campylotropous or occasionally anatropous; style 1 or occasionally absent; stigma capitate or rarely decurrent, entire or 2-lobed.
Fruit:
Capsules divided into 2 cells by the usually thin and membranous septum; elongate (at least 3 times as long as wide) and referred to as a silique; or short (less than 3 times a long as wide) and referred to as a silicle; dehiscent from the base upward; exposing the septum; sometimes fruit indehiscent or dehiscent and jointed between the seeds; ± breaking up at maturity.
Seeds 1 to numerous; often becoming mucilaginous when wet; endosperm essentially absent.
Ploidy:
Habitat:
Occurring primarily in cool to warm temperate regions of both hemispheres; with especially large numbers in arid climates such as the Mediterranean region; western North America; and temperate South America.
Elevation Range: