Caulanthus major (M.E. Jones) Payson
Family: Brassicaceae
Slender Wild Cabbage
[Caulanthus crassicaulis var. major M.E. Jones,  more...]
Caulanthus major image
Dean Wm. Taylor  

Perennials; glabrous (or petioles and sepals pubescent). Stems erect or ascending, unbranched or branched distally, (hollow, sometimes slightly inflated), 2-10 dm. Basal leaves rosulate; petiole 0.5-9 cm; blade obovate to oblanceolate or elliptic (in outline), 1-14 cm × 5-25 mm, margins entire, dentate-sinuate, lyrate, or pinnatifid-runcinate. Cauline leaves (distalmost) shortly petiolate; blade linear to narrowly oblanceolate, margins entire. Racemes (densely flowered), without a terminal cluster of sterile flowers. Fruiting pedicels ascending, 1-6 mm. Flowers: sepals erect, (creamy white or purple), ovate to lanceolate, 6.5-9.5 × 2.7-4 mm, (equal, pubescent); petals purple, 11-17 mm, blade 4-7 × 1-1.7 mm, not or hardly crisped, claw oblanceolate, 7-13 × 2.5-3.5 mm; filaments tetradynamous, median pairs 5-7 mm, lateral pair 4-6 mm; anthers narrowly oblong, equal, 4-6 mm. Fruits erect to ascending, terete or slightly latiseptate, 4.5-12 cm × 2.2-2.8 mm; valves each with obscure midvein; ovules 46-58 per ovary; style obsolete or, rarely, to 0.4 mm; stigma slightly 2-lobed (lobes opposite valves). Seeds 2-3.5 × 1.3-1.8 mm. 2n = 28.

Flowering May-Aug. Margin of montane forests, sagebrush, pinyon-juniper woodland; 1500-3200 m; Calif., Nev., Oreg., Utah.

Caulanthus major is found in eastern and southern California, Nevada, southeastern Oregon, and Utah.

Caulanthus major image
Dean Wm. Taylor  
Caulanthus major image
Gary A. Monroe  
Caulanthus major image
Gary A. Monroe  
Caulanthus major image
Gary A. Monroe  
Caulanthus major image
Gary A. Monroe