MUSTARD FAMILY 101 
(>) Pods cylindrical ; seeds ellipsoid. Flowers very small, yellow. 
Sisymbrium, VIII 
(c) Pods cylindrical; seeds globular. Flowers of moderate size, 
yellow. Brassica, VII 
(d@) Pods eylindrical; seeds in 2 rows; flowers white. Or pods 
ovoid or ellipsoid; flower yellowish. Aquatic plants, or 
growing in wet soil. Radicula, IX 
(e) Pods cylindrical or angled; seeds in a single row, flattened. 
Flowers yellow. Barbarea, X 
; c 
Pods elongated, often jointed, tapering toward the tip, never splitting 
open. Raphanus, VI 
D 
Pods jlattened parallel to the partition, splitting open when ripe. 
(a) Wild species: leafy-stemmed: growing in or near water. Pods 
near. Cardainine, XII 
(b) Wild species: stems naked below. bearing only 2 or 5 leaves. 
Pods lanceolate. Dentaria, XI 
(c) Wild species; leafy-stemmed; growing on dry ground or 
rocks. Pods linear ; seeds usually winged or margined. 
Arabis, NTI 
(d) Cultivated species. Pods round or roundish.  Lobularia, I 
(€) Cultivated species; covered with a grayish down of star- 
shaped hairs. Pods cylindrical. Matthiola, II 
I. LOBULARIA Desy. (KONIGA) 
Perennial, though usually growing as an annual. Stems 
branching, diffuse; branches slender. Leaves small, entire, 
downy, with forked hairs. Flowers small, white, in numerous 
terminal racemes. Petals obovate, entire, twice as long as the 
sepals. Filaments enlarged below. Pod round, compressed ; 
seeds 1 in each cell.* 
1. L. maritima Desv. Swerer Atryssum. Stem weak, diffuse, 
ascending, minutely downy. Lower leaves narrowed into a petiole, 
the upper sessile. Racemes erect, many-flowered. Flowers fragrant, 
pedicels ascending. Pod often pointed. Common in cultivation and 
often run wild.* 
