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Tansymustard
Common
Name(s):
Tansymustard
Scientific
Name:
Descurainia
pinnata (Walt.) Britt.
Scientific
Name Synonyms:
None known
Symbol:
DEPI
Description:
Life
Span: Annual
Origin:
Native
Season: Cool
Growth Characteristics:
An
erect forb, growing 4 to 32 inches high, with a single stem or a
branched stem, growing from a taproot. Flowers March to August,
reproduces from seeds. Tansymustard plants are showy when flowering
but become ragged and inconspicuous as seed matures.
Flowers/Inflorescence:
Petals
are white to bright yellow, sepals rose-colored. Flower occurs in
series of 4 (4 petals, 4 sepals), hence the family name Cruciferae
(crucifix).
Fruits/Seeds:Fruits
are siliques, with two cells, and several seeds per cell. Seeds
borne on a pedicel.
Leaves: Alternate,
usually bipinnately compound. The blades at the top of the plant
are usually smaller and more simply pinnate. Leaves lightly to densely
pubescent.
Ecological
Adaptations:
Tansymustard
is a widespread weedy species that grows on a variety of sites.
It occurs in waste places, disturbed areas, plains, dry hillsides,
prairies, open woods, and along streambanks. Tansymustard grows
most commonly along ditches, roadsides, or on other disturbed, open
sites where mineral soil has been exposed. In parts of western Utah,
it is particularly common in areas that have been subjected to high
levels of rodent disturbance.
Soils: Adapted
to a broad range of soils, most abundant in dry or sandy soils.
Associated Species:
Cheatgrass,
Russian thistle, bur buttercup.
Uses and
Management:
Tansymustard
is poisonous to cattle in the southwest. Symptoms of poisoning in
cattle include "paralyzed tongue" or an inability to swallow
food and water, partial or complete blindness, and aimless wandering.
Generally, it results from consuming large quantities of plant material.
Poisoning can be easily avoided since tansymustard is green earlier
in the spring than most forage species.
Tansymustard is fair to good forage for sheep and goats. Its palatability
declines with maturity.
Seeds of tansymustard were used by American Indians to make pinole
flour. Young plants were used as a potherb.
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