PI. ex. that. 80. CRUCIFER^E. 429. Sinapis. L 687 
5. Sinapis muralis. Wall mustard. 
Siliquce linear, bald, nearly upright ; beak very short; 
peduncles spreading; leaves sinuate, bald; stein spreading, 
hairy. 
Sisymbrium murale, Lin. S. P. 918. 
Sinapis muralis, R. Brown in Hort. Kew. 128. 
Sandy places by the sea ; annual ; July to September. 
Stem rather branched, hairy; hairs bent back; leaves 
lanceolate, unequally serrated, green ; peduncles very long* 
rather hispid, racemose; sepales bald; petals small, citron 
yellow ; siliquce slender. 
C. Siliquce long, valveless, 1-celled, jointed; cotyledons 
conduplicate. 
XIII. 430. R A PH ANUS. Theophrastus. Radish . 
Siliquce round, pointed, spongy, valveless, many-celled, 
torulose; cells membranaceous, in a double longitudinal 
series; cotyledons conduplicate; calyx close. 
Raphanus sativus. Cultivated radish. 
Leaves lyrate ; siliquce cylindrical. 
Raphanus, Raii Syn. 296, 1. 
Raphanus sativus, Ger. em. 237, 1 and 2 ; Lin. S. P. 935. 
Raphanus vulgaris, Park. 861. 
Saltnun radish. Rabone. 
Cultivated; annual or biennial; May to September. 
Root fusiform, reddish ; leaves ly rate-pinnate, hairy ; sili- 
quce bellied at bottom.— -Root and young leaves eaten as 
sallad. 
j3. napiformis. Root globular. 
Raphanus orbiculatus, Ger. em. 238, 3. 
Turnep radish. 
- y. nigra. Root fusiform, black. 
Raphanus pyriformis, sive radice nigra, Ger. em. 238,4. 
Black radish. 
XIV. 431. RAPHANISTRUM. Morison. Wild-radish. 
Siliquce valveless, many-celled, jointed, becoming neck- 
laceshape ; cells bony, in a longitudinal series ; cotyledons 
conduplicate : calyx closed. — Petals veined. 
1. Raphanistrum vulgare. Common wild-radish. 
Leaves simply lyrate; siliqua-joints smooth. 
