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Hoary mustard

Hirschfeldia incana

Family: Brassicaceae Genus: Hirschfeldia Species: incana

Synonyms: Hirschfeldia adpressa, Strangalis adpressa, Sinapis incana, Sisymbrium incanum, Raphanus incanus, Erucastrum incanum var. dasycarpa, Brassica nigra var. incana, Brassica incana, Sinapis adpressa, Hirschfeldia incana subsp. adpressa, Hirschfeldia incana var. leiocarpa, Hirschfeldia incana var. dasycarpa, Erucastrum incanum, Brassica adpressa

Hoary mustard (en)
Hirschfeldia incana โ€” flower
Hirschfeldia incana โ€” flower

Botanical Description

Hirschfeldia incana, the hoary mustard or shortpod mustard, is an erect biennial or short-lived perennial herb in the family Brassicaceae native to the Mediterranean basin and now widely naturalized across temperate and subtropical regions worldwide, including California, the southwestern United States, Australia, and southern Africa. Plants reach 30-150 cm in height, with stiff branching stems arising from a stout taproot and a basal rosette of leaves; the lower stem and rosette are densely clothed in stiff white spreading hairs, giving the plant a greyish or hoary appearance. Basal leaves are oblanceolate, 8-25 cm long, lyrate-pinnatifid with a large terminal lobe and several smaller lateral lobes; upper stem leaves are smaller, lanceolate, and entire to coarsely toothed, with a short petiole. The inflorescence is an elongate raceme of small four-petalled bright-yellow flowers 5-8 mm across, typical of the cabbage family. As fruiting proceeds the silique becomes distinctively two-segmented: a short lower cylindrical segment 4-12 mm long containing several seeds, and a much shorter, swollen, club-shaped upper segment with one or two seeds and a stout apical beak. The whole fruit is closely appressed to the rachis. The species inhabits roadside verges, fallow fields, waste ground, and overgrazed pasture.

Native Region: Albania, Algeria, Baleares, Canary Is., Corse, Cyprus, East Aegean Is., France, Greece, Iran, Iraq, Italy, Kriti, Krym, Lebanon-Syria, Libya, Madeira, Morocco, North Caucasus, Palestine, Portugal, Sardegna, Saudi Arabia, Sicilia, Spain, Transcaucasus, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkey-in-Europe, Yugoslavia

Cultural & Historical Context

Traditional American Uses

None Documented

Chemistry & External Identifiers

Trefle ID
194957

Important Disclaimer

This information is for educational purposes only and is not intended to replace professional medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before using any herbal remedy, especially if you are pregnant, nursing, or taking medications.