Field peppergrass (Lepidium campestre) flowers and fruit. Left top: the top of a field peppergrass plant showing the characteristic cylindrical “bottlebrush” inflorescence. Bottom left: a single flower; note the spoon-shaped whte petals, stamens with tan anthers, and a central style and stigma. This flower has already been fertilized and the light green ovary is expanding into the fruit. Top right: more flowers producing fruit (arrows) even though the petals remain. Bottom right: a portion of the inflorescence where the flowers have been completely replaced by the seed pods. Note that a remnant of the style still persists on the seed pod (arrow).
Field peppergrass stems produce racemes of flowers near their apex; flowers near the top of the raceme are the youngest with older flowers (and later seed pods) further down the inflorescence. The flowers have a calyx of green or purple-green, lance-like sepals, four white, spoon-shaped petals, six stamens, and a single style. The fruits are flattened pods oval in outline with the remnants of the style protruding from a notch in the end (rather like field pennycress, Thlaspi arvense); each seedpod contains two seeds. This is an easy plant to overlook if only because it looks like the weed that it is.
Field peppergrass (Lepidium campestre) stems and leaves. Left: a stem with a rosette of basal leaves and numerous stem leaves. Right bottom: the same rosette of basal leaves as the image on the left, enlarged. Right middle: stem leaves looking perpendicular to the stem. Right top: stem leaves, looking down the stem towards the ground.
Field peppergrass (aka, field cress) is an exotic from Europe that gets 1-2 feet tall. Initially, the plant consists of a basal rosette of oval or pinnatifid leaves. One or more erect, gray-green stems (and stem leaves) covered with downy hairs arise that later tend to branch at the base and at the apex (where the flowers occur). Stem leaves are alternate, up to 3″ long and 1/4 as wide, decreasing in size up the stem; the leaves clasp the stem. This is an easy plant to overlook if only because it looks like the weed that it is.
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