Vascular Plants of North Carolina
Account for White Mustard - Sinapis alba   L.
Members of Brassicaceae:
Only member of Sinapis in NC.
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Section 6 » Order Capparales » Family Brassicaceae
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AuthorL.
DistributionTwo counties each in the Mountains and the Piedmont.

Native of Eurasia; in N.A. essentially throughout.
AbundanceVery rare.
HabitatCampus weed, roadside near river, shrub border.
PhenologyFlowering and fruiting April-June.
IdentificationWhite Mustard may reach 3 feet tall or more, but will also flower when much shorter. The stems are hispid/hairy. The basal leaves are oblong or ovate in outline, the margins lyrate to pinnatisect. The middle and upper stem leaves vary from merely toothed to having a few small lobes. The flowers are pale to bright yellow. The pods are rather constricted between the seeds, hispid, and with a long, compressed beak. S. arvensis differs in its smooth pods that are not compressed.
Taxonomic CommentsOften named as Brassica hirta.

Other Common Name(s)
State RankSE
Global RankGNR
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