WOOTON AND STANDLEY FLORA OF NEW MEXICO. 271 



12. CARDARIA Desv. Hoary cress. 



1. Cardaria draba (L.) Desv. Journ. de Bot. 3: 163. 1813. 



Lepidium draba L. Sp. PL 645. 1753. 



Type locality: "Habitat in Germania, praesertim Austria, Gallia, Italia." 



New Mexico: Mesilla Valley. 



An introduced weed having the appearance of a Lepidium, but the pods ovate- 

 cordato, acute at the apex. It probably occurs elsewhere in the State, since the seeds 

 are often distributed with those of garden or field crops or with grass seeds. It haa 

 been well established in the Mesilla Valley in alfalfa fields for several years. 



13. LEPIDIUM L. Peppergrass. 



Herbaceous annuals or short-hved perennials ^nth pinnatifid or simple leaves; 

 flowers of medium or small size (in one of our species apetalous), with white petals, 

 in crowded racemes, these elongating in fruit; stamens often fewer than 6; siliques 

 orbicular or oblong, strongly flattened contrary to the septum, dehiscent, sometimes 

 A\T.ng-margined; seeds flattened, solitary in each valve. 



key to the species. 



Style conspicuous, equaling or exceeding the wing margins of the 

 fruit. 

 Stems pubescent throughout; all the cauUne leaves pinnatifid. 1. L. thurberi. 

 Stems glabrous, at least below; upper cauline leaves entire. 

 Branches of the inflorescence pubescent; lower cauline 



leaves pinnatifid, the upper linear-oblong 2. L. eastwoodiae . 



Branches of the inflorescence glabrous; all the cauline 



leaves entire, linear 3. L. alyssoides. 



Style obsolete, at least much shorter than the wing margins of the 

 fruit. 



Petals wanting 4. L. apetalum. 



Petals present. 



Stems and leaves glabrous except sometimes below. 



(Plants bright green.) 5. L. medium. 



Stems and leaves pubescent. 



Fruit glabrous; stems puberulent, erect 6. L. hirsufum. 



Fruit pubescent; stems villous, spreading 7. L. lasiocarpum. 



1. Lepidium thurberi Wooton, Bull. Torrey Club 25: 259. 189S. 



Type locality: Lava, New Mexico. Type collected by Wooton (no. 672). 

 Range: Southwestern New Mexico to Arizona. 



New Mexico: Lava; Cienaga Ranch; Silver City; Dog Spring; near White Water; 

 Hatchet Ranch; Reserve. Upper Sonoran Zone. 



2. Lepidium eastwoodiae Wooton, Bull. Torrey Club 25: 258. 1898. 



Type locality: Mescalero Agency, White Mountains, New Mexico. Type col- 

 lected by Wooton. 



Range: New Mexico and southern Colorado. 



New Mexico: Farmington; Cliama; Cerrillos; Sandia Mountains; Gallinas Moun- 

 tains; Galisteo; Organ Mountains; Sacramento and \\Tiite mountains. Mountains, in 

 the Upper Sonoran and Transition zones. 



A common plant in the mountains of the central and southern parts of the State. 

 It is a short-lived perennial corymbosely branched above, with numerous racemes of 

 bright white flowers. The foliage is of a rather pronounced gi"een (rarely yellowish 

 green), and the lower leaves are pinnately di^dded, the upper leaves simple, oblong- 

 lanceolate, flat. 



