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Noccaea fendleri more commonly known as wild candytuft and alpine pennycress is a wildflower in the mustard family from western North America. It grows in mountains from northern Mexico to the northern United States. It blooms early in the spring and provides nectar to butterflies. Description. Noccaea fendleri is a small perennial plant.
Animals & Nature. pennycress, (genus Thlaspi ), genus of plants of the mustard family ( Brassicaceae ), named and sometimes grown for their round seedpods. Most of the species are Eurasian, but a few are native to North and South America, mostly in mountain areas.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Flower: Elongating clusters of stalked flowers at the top of the plant and at the tips of branching stems arising from the upper leaf axils, with a densely packed, rounded cluster of open flowers at the tip and fruit forming below. Upper branches are often initially horizontal, becoming ascending.
Thlaspi arvense, also known as field pennycress, is an annual herb that is native to Europe, Asia, and North America. It typically grows to be about 80 cm tall, and has small, white or pale-pink flowers that bloom in the spring and summer. The leaves are deeply lobed and are typically a pale green color.
Range & Habitat: The non-native Field Pennycress is a common plant that occurs in most areas of Illinois (see Distribution Map). It is adventive from Eurasia. Habitats include cropland, fallow fields, areas along roadsides and railroads, gardens and nursery plots, weedy meadows, and waste areas.
Thlaspi arvense, known by the common name field pennycress, [1] is a flowering plant in the cabbage family Brassicaceae. It is native to Eurasia, and is a common weed throughout much of North America and its home.
Flowers. This plant has four white petals, clawed, grow up to 4mm long and 1.5mm broad. They are produced in dense racemes that elongate with age. It has six stamens, divided into 2 sets of 3 on either side of the flattened ovary. It has four sepals and flowers from May to July. Leaves.